Quintana v. Consolidated Kansas City Smelting & Refining Co.

37 S.W. 369, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 347, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 331
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 30, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 37 S.W. 369 (Quintana v. Consolidated Kansas City Smelting & Refining Co.) 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
Quintana v. Consolidated Kansas City Smelting & Refining Co., 37 S.W. 369, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 347, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 331 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by appellant against appellee to recover damages for the death of her son, Ramon, Which was caused from injuries inflicted by the - alleged negligence of appellee while he was in its service, performing the duties of his employment.

The evidence contained in the record warrants us in finding the following conclusions of fact:

In June, 1895, the appellee was engaged in operating a smelter near the city of El Paso. At that time Ramon Quintana, a son of appellant, was one of its employes, whose duty it was to enter a pit at the bottom of an incline, into which cars were run for the purpose of carrying ores and slag therefrom to the feed-floor in the second story of the smelter building. The cars were lowered and raised to and from the pit by means of a wire cable attached to them with a hook fastened to its end. When Ramon was in the pit in the performance of his duties, one of the cars so attached to a cable was started down the incline and an attempt was made to stop it in the usual manner, which was by preventing the cable from running off the drum on which it was wound, the hook was pulled off the cable, and the car, in consequence, ran with great violence down the incline and against Ramon Quintana, causing his death. The appellee, in fastening the hook, which pulled loose, to the cable and in keeping it securely fastened, used that degree of diligence which a man of ordinary care and prudence would have exercised under like circumstances; and, in failing to have and keep such hook securely fastened to the cable, it was guilty of no negligence towards the deceased.

In connection with our conclusions of law, some of the evidence upon which the above findings are predicated will be stated from the record.

Conclusions of Law.—The court instructed the jury that, “When one accepts employment from another he assumes such risks as may *349 exist from latent defects in machinery or appliances with which he is engaged in the discharge of his employment. Latent defects are such as may exist in machinery and appliances, but which are not discoverable by the exercise of that degree of diligence which a man of ordinary care and diligence would have exercised under like circumstances; but he does not assume such risks as may arise from the negligence of the person employing him—for instance, such as.may arise from defects in machinery which he is provided with by his employer, if such defects exist because of the negligence of his employer.”

The succeding paragraph of the charge is as follows: “If you believe from the evidence that the defendant employed Ramon Quintana in and about its cars used to elevate ores, then it was defendant’s duty to use reasonable diligence to supply said cars with reasonably safe appliances, and use reasonable diligence in adjusting such appliances, and use such diligence to keep them in reasonably safe condition. By the use of the terms “reasonable diligence” as here used, is meant such diligence as a man of ordinary care would have exercised under like circumstances. The employer is not required to resort to all means that human foresight or ingenuity might suggest in detecting defects in machinery or appliances, but only such diligence in detecting and remedying defects as a man of ordinary care would have exercised under like circumstances. Neither is the master liable for latent defects which may exist in the machinery, which defects he could not have discovered by the use of ordinary diligence, prior to the happening of an accident.”

The objections urged in appellant’s assignments to the paragraphs of the charge quoted are: 1, that a latent defect being one not obvious, is, in this case, a matter of no consequence or importance, and should have not been submitted; for if the plaintiff was entitled to recover, it was upon the ground that the end of the cable had not been properly and skillfully fastened in the hook-socket, and the negligence of the defendant consisted in doing the work of the fastening in such careless, unskillful and improper way that the accident happened; 2, that under the law, it was the duty, in this case, of the employer to use a high degree of care in keeping the machinery and appliances in repair, and it was under an obligation to use a high degree of care and skill in fastening the end of the cable in the hook-socket, and, to accomplish this end, it was incumbent upon the master to see that all the work done in fastening the end of the cable in the hook-socket was done in a proper, skillful and effectual way; and, 3, the attention of the jury was repeatedly called in the charge to a possible latent defect, when its existence or non-existence was of no importance so far as the right of the plaintiff to recover is concerned.

These objections, except the second, do not question the soundness of the principles announced as abstract propositions of law. The first goes to the applicability of the principles to the case, as it is made by the pleadings and the evidence. A succinct recital, therefore, of plain *350 tiff’s statement of her cause of action and of the evidence adduced on the trial, is necessary to an understanding of the points made by appellant on these assignments, as well as to a comprehension of our view of the law upon them.

The negligence charged in plaintiff’s petition was in not having the hook referred to in the part of the charge quoted, securely fastened to the cable, and in having the fastenings in a bad, defective and dangerous condition at the time, of the accident, and in allowing the same to become out of repair, and that defendant knew or could have known by the exercise of ordinary care of the bad, defective and dangerous condition of said hook and cable.

The evidence shows that the end of the cable to which the car was attached passed into a socket about three and one-half inches long, at the end of and forming a part of the hook by which the cable was connected with the car. From this diagram and the following evidence will be seen and understood how the cable was fastened to the hook:

One end of the cable was run through the socket, then the wires forming the cable were untwined and spread about an inch or an inch and a half, so a part of the cable, in the socket was divided. The ends of the strands were then bent back in the socket and melted lead poured in the larger end of the socket, which ran down between the wire strands and the cable and socket so as to imbed the wire fibres and cable and make the parts in the socket invisible. This method of fastening, adopted in this case, was, according to the testimony of experts, the best and most approved. The cable attached to the hook was such as was generally used for the purpose to which it was applied, and was considered good and sufficient for that work, there being no evidence of any visible defects in any part of it. It had been in use about three weeks, during which time it drew up the incline loaded cars weighing twice as much as the empty car which was being lowered when it parted from the hook-socket. The cause of this separation may have been from breaking of the cable in the socket, or from its pulling loose from it—the evidence, in our judgment, preponderating in *351 favor of the former theory. In the event it broke, the parting may have been caused from a latent defect in the cable.

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Bluebook (online)
37 S.W. 369, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 347, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quintana-v-consolidated-kansas-city-smelting-refining-co-texapp-1896.