Producers' Oil Co. v. Green

212 S.W. 68, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 615
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 23, 1919
DocketNo. 7753.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 212 S.W. 68 (Producers' Oil Co. v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Producers' Oil Co. v. Green, 212 S.W. 68, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 615 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

Dr. Green brought this suit

against the Producers’ Oil Company a corporation, and W. J. Sherman, an individual, to recover the reasonable value of his professional services in having performed a surgical operation upon R. R. Earp, one of the Oil Company’s employés, who had been injured while in its service. He sought judgment against Sherman individually only in event the corporation was not held, thus alleging the basis of its liability:

“That on or about the 25th day of February, 1916, the said W. J. Sherman, being then and there the duly authorized agent of his code-fendant, Producers’ Oil Company, requested this plaintiff to perform an operation upon one R. R. Earp, an employé of Producers’ Oil Company, who had been injured during his employment with said company. Acting upon this request, plaintiff did in fact perform said operation, known as sature of the patella. Said operation was performed with care and skill, and was, from both a medical and practical standpoint, successful. That before performing the operation plaintiff was assured by the defendant, acting through its authorized agent as aforesaid, that said Producers’ Oil Company would pay to the plaintiff his fees for performing said operation, though no express contract as to the amount of the charge was made.”

Over the protest of the Oil Company the cause was submitted on special issues to a jury, who found that W. J. Sherman, before the service was rendered, requested Dr. Green to perform the operation upon Earp under statement that the company would pay him for it, and that Sherman was authorized by the Oil Company to make such request and statement.

No issues being raised as to the rendition of the service nor as to the reasonableness of the amount claimed therefor, pursuant to this verdict the court entered judgment in Dr. Green’s favor against the corporation alone for $150, permitting Sherman to go hence with his costs.

The Oil Company appeals contending through a number of assignments that it was not liable, and that its request for a peremptory instruction embodying that view of the law should have been given below.

We think the position well taken. The undisputed testimony showed that Sherman was merely a stenographer and clerk in the office of the general superintendent for the South Texas division of the business, C. P. Clayton, the latter being a general officer of the company and head of the department in which Sherman worked, the actual operation of the corporation’s business being divided into departments, each having a head; that at the time Sherman made the request of and statement to Dr. Green found by the jury the Producers’ Oil Company was a subscriber to the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Acts 33d Leg. c. 179 [Vernon’s Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1914, arts. 5246h-5246zzzz]), and had provided for the insurance of all its employés thereunder, which facts were then communicated to Dr. Green; and that, aside from such authority as legally might and actually did come to him from his superior officer, Mr. Clayton, Sherman had none whatever to bind the company to pay for medical services rendered to Earp; indeed, Dr. Green himself excludes any other source by the specific declaration of his cause of action already quoted, and by" his testimony hereinafter referred to.

Beyond the uncontroverted features stated, *69 there may at first blush appear to he some haziness in the evidence as to what authority was, or more accurately speaking, perhaps, was attempted to be, conferred on Sherman by Clayton, but it is thought a careful reading of the record as a whole will dispel it.

Sherman first testified by deposition, the material portion of his evidence there given being this:

“I was in the head office. I was not one of the department heads. * * * I was connected with the general superintendent’s office. I was a stenographer and clerk in the office. I handled the accident report in the claim or injury of Mr. R. R. Earp, an employé of the Producers’ Oil Company. The Humble office turned that over to me. The superintendent at Humble mailed it into the office and I got it when it reached the office. Part of my duties was opening the mail and attending to matters of this kind. Nobody gave me authority to attend to matters of this kind. * * * It was part of the duties of the office. One of the duties of the desk I was on was attending to matters of this kind. That was one of the duties of the desk that I occupied on or ¿bout February 25, 1916. It was one of the duties I performed under C. P. Clayton, general superintendent, and was turned over to me by him to handle.
“I am the same W. J. Sherman who phoned to Dr. Charles C. Green about this matter. * * * Mr. Clayton told me to phone to Dr. Green about this matter. He was the head of that department at that time. I reported back to Mr. Clayton that I had phoned to Dr. Green. “The actual running of the business of the Producers’ Oil Company was divided into departments, each with a department head. Mr. Clayton was the general superintendent of this division of the Producers’ Oil Company, and he occupied that position on the 25th day of February, 1916.
“Í kept Mr. Clayton informed as to what was being done and the progress being made by me in the Earp matter, and the Earp matter was being handled by me under the supervision and control of Mr. Clayton.”

Upon the trial he was again a witness, orally reiterating that he was only a stenographer and clerk in the general superintendent’s office, and as such merely under the duty of handling and making out the accident report in such instances as this, explaining in detail that his former apparently unqualified statements in the deposition were not meant to go further and to imply that Mr. Clayton had placed him in general charge of Earp’s case. These material excerpts will sufficiently indicate the purport of his explanations:

“Neither Mr. Clayton or any other general officer of the company authorized me to arrange to have this man operated on. I have stated in my direct examination that it was my duty to handle the accident report. It was not a part of my duty, and I did not have authority from any general officer of the company, or any one else over there, to arrange for medical services for this employé or any other employé. My duty with reference to that was merely to 'collect the accident reports off of the people and send them in to the insurance company. * * ⅞ I testified on direct examination by deposition, in answer to the question as to what connection I had with the claim or injury of R. R. Earp, that I handled the accident report. * * * I referred to handling the accident reports. That would not have any connection whatever with employing physicians to render medical service or any other service to an injured employé. He asked me this question, ‘It was one of the duties you performed under O. P. Clayton, general superintendent, and was turned over to you by him to handle?’ To which I answered, ‘Yes.’ The duties I referred to there were the handling of the accident report. Mr. Clayton instructed me to call Dr. Green to ascertain if the man could be removed from the St. Joseph’s infirmary to the Baptist Sanitarium. He didn’t say anything to me about arranging with any one for payment of medical services rendered to that man. * * * Neither Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
212 S.W. 68, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/producers-oil-co-v-green-texapp-1919.