Producers Oil Company v. Barnes

131 S.W. 531, 103 Tex. 515, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 239
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1910
DocketNo. 2084.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 131 S.W. 531 (Producers Oil Company v. Barnes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Producers Oil Company v. Barnes, 131 S.W. 531, 103 Tex. 515, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 239 (Tex. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was instituted by Vanda Barnes against the plaintiff in error to recover damages for personal injuries received under the state of facts given below:

The company was engaged in boring an oil well at Humble and employed the defendant in error to work at said well. The work was accomplished by use of the means hereinafter stated. A derrick was constructed which was about twenty feet square at the *518 bottom extending to a height of eighty-four feet, the size of which at the top is not given in the statement of facts, so far as we have seen, and is unimportant. The structure consisted of pieces of timber at each of four corners of the dimension of ten by two inches and of sufficient length to reach from the bottom to the top. There was a floor at the bottom of the derrick and in the center the well was being bored. At a point about forty-five feet above the floor pieces of timber were fastened to the uprights of the derrick so as to hold them together and strengthen the structure. Upon two of these pieces of timber, called girts, or ribs, were laid two boards, or pieces of plank, which were called “double-boards.” In this derrick the double-boards were placed upon the west side of the center, and the cable and block hereinafter described passed up and down to the east of the double-boards. The well was being bored with a four-inch pipe with a bit upon the end of it, and by the use of methods not necessary to describe here the pipe was sunk into the ground, and when one piece had been sunk below the surface another was attached and sunk as the first, continuing in that manner to the completion of the work. For the purpose of lifting this pipe out of the well when necessary there was what the witness called a rig, that is, there was at some point above the place where the double-boards were situated a block with wheels in it which were called sheaves, and there was also located at a place not given a drum. A cable was coiled around the drum and one end passed through the blocks which were above the double-boards. The end of this cable was attached to a block in which were three sheaves, or wheels, called the traveling block. To remove the pipe from the well the traveling block was lowered and was fastened to the pipe in a way not made clear in the testimony, whereupon the power was applied and, by the motion of the drum and the winding of the cable, the pipe, thus fastened to the traveling block, was lifted out of the ground up to the double-boards. In boring the well with the pipe water' was used, and when the piping was removed from the well it brought with it water and mud and oil, if oil had been reached. In handling the pipes they necessarily came in contact with the double-boards and deposited water, mud and oil upon them. The witnesses stated without contradiction that there was no way in which to avoid this deposit.

Barnes was about nineteen years' old at the time of the accident. He had worked in other oil well derricks about two months before he commenced to work at this, but he worked upon the floor of the derrick and never upon the double-boards.' He had been at work at this place about fifteen days when the injury occurred, being engaged all the time on the floor of the derrick. The injury occurred at night. There were five men and the driller, named Carter, who was the boss of the men engaged in this work, and they had assembled on the floor of the derrick to begin work when one of the men who had been working in the derrick, that is, on the double-boards, asked, “Who will go up the derrick tonight ?” to which no one responded, and young Barnes said: “If nobody else will go, I will.” Carter was in charge of the men with authority *519 over them. He heard what was said hut did not tell Barnes to go or forbid him to go. Carter knew that Barnes went up on to the double-boards to perform the services up there, and an older brother of Barnes said, in substance, to Carter: "That kid ought not to go up there; he does not know what he is doing.”

Young Barnes went up the ladder to the double-boards where there was no light for use. After he had gotten up there the men lifted two pieces of pipe one at a time up to him and he received and handled them thus: when a piece of pipe was brought up by the traveling block Barnes would wait until the traveling block was above his head and then he would remove the belt which was around the pipe below the collar of it and the men at the lower end would place it at the proper point on the floor and Barnes would place the upper end behind what was called the finger-board to hold the pipe in its proper position. When the third piece of pipe was not quite high enough for Barnes to release it from the block, .he was standing on the double-boards in his position for service, and his left foot slipped off the double-boards, which threw him forward, and he threw out his hand, catching the traveling block and his hand was caught in the wheels, or sheaves, in that block and three of his fingers were mashed off and others injured.

The derrick was not exactly plumb; the traveling block, when let down near to the floor, hung about six inches from a true line from the upper block to the well. The defendant in error testified that he did not know what caused his foot to slip; it was dark; he could not see so as to tell anything about it. The brother of plaintiff, E. Barnes, testified to the fact that the derrick was out of plumb, as above stated, and that this condition would make the double-boards slant to the east, or to the inside of the derrick. He also testified that he had worked the night before at the same place, performing the same services there and that his foot slipped on the double-boards. We have stated all the testimony that we have been able to find which would tend to show the condition of the double-boards. There is nothing to show to what extent the double-boards Avere slanting, whether it was much or little, nor is there any testimony to show whether there was water and mud and oil upon the double-boards that night, except the fact that in handling the pipes they would come in contact with the. double-boards and necessarily leave the deposit of mud and water thereon. It was necessary for the man who served on the double-boards to reach out and take hold of the pipe, pulling it towards him until he was able to release it from the moving block.

The writ of error was granted in this case because we were inclined to the opinion that the evidence does not show with sufficient certainty the negligence of the oil company, nor that the slant of the boards contributed to the injury which Barnes received.

The question for our determination is, does the most favorable view of the evidence constitute such degree of proof as authorized the jury in an honest effort to arrive at the truth to find the verdict which they did in this case? The questions which" were submitted to the jury were: (1) Was the place unsafe for the work to be *520 done by Barnes? (3) Was defendant negligent in furnishing the place at which Barnes worked in the condition that it was? and (3) Did the negligence of the defendant in so furnishing an unsafe place contribute to the injury received ?

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.W. 531, 103 Tex. 515, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/producers-oil-company-v-barnes-tex-1910.