San Antonio & A. P. Ry. Co. v. Mason

289 S.W. 1027
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 22, 1926
DocketNo. 7658.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 289 S.W. 1027 (San Antonio & A. P. Ry. Co. v. Mason) 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
San Antonio & A. P. Ry. Co. v. Mason, 289 S.W. 1027 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

Appellee sued appellant to recover damages for personal injuries inflicted upon his person, which caused the amputation of appellee’s third finger, physical pain and suffering, and diminished his earning capacity as a manual laborer by reason ’of negligence attributable to appellant in not providing appellee with a safe place to work, or in not supplying appellee with prompt medical attention.

Appellant’s answer contained ten paragraphs of general demurrers, special exceptions, and answers. The answer contained general denial, special answer setting up the statute of limitations in respect to the right of appellee to recover anything by reason of the alleged breach of the contract to furnish medical attention, and special answer setting up contributory negligence of appellee in *1028 treatment of tlie finger after its injury was caused by the negligence of appellee.

A special answer setting up the necessity of the water drain, for drainage purposes, which, it was alleged, was the proximate cause of the injury, and that appellee was negligent in placing and loading the trunks on the truck so near the drain as to cause the truck to roll in the drain at the place ap-pellee was loading trunks from the cars while standing over the drain, that appellee knew where said drain was located, and that his contributory negligence was the proximate cause of the injury.

The case was submitted to a jury on special issues, and, upon the return of their verdict assessing the damages against appellant for $5,000, judgment was accordingly entered against defendant for said sum.

Briefly, to understand this case, appellee was a porter working at appellant’s depot in Corpus Christi. Among his duties, he was required to load and unload baggage in and from appellant’s baggage cars at its depot. For the purpose of draining water from the depot grounds, appellant had caused a smq.ll drainage ditch to be dug. The ditch and its location are not well defined in the briefs of the parties, but we assume from the testimony it was very close to the track, and, in order to drive the truck close enough to the car for the purpose of unloading, the porter would have his truck close to the car and perhaps the wheels would be standing close to the drain and perhaps over. The allegation of the petition, is:

“On or about May 29, .1921, plaintiff, in the discharge of his duties as an employee of defendant, was engaged at its passenger station in Corpus Christi, in the removal of baggage, consisting of trunks, from the passenger' car into defendant’s baggage and trunk room, across its railroad tracks, from said car; and in so doing he was using a truck supplied him for such purpose by the defendant; and in order to place such baggage onto said truck, he placed the truck near the door of. the baggage car, and while he was placing a trunk in proper position thereon, and was using due care and caution in so doing, the wheels under one end of the truck rolled down into a water drain that defendant had carelessly and negligently m.ade in the surface of the ground, and which passed under the truck on which the track on which the baggage car was standing, and there,by the truck was caused to move forward, parallel with the car, and plaintiff’s hand was caught between the trunk that plaintiff was placing on the truck and one side of the facing of the door of the car, and thereby mashed plaintiff’s left hand and the third little finger thereof, thereby seriously injuring plaintiff’s left hand and said fingers of same.”

It was alleged that the appellant did not furnish appellee a safe place to work in removing the baggage from the cars to the depot. It was also alleged that he had a verbal contract with appellant, in consideration that he paid 50 cents monthly (which he paid), it was agreed, and appellant obligated itself, to supply plaintiff with prompt and efficient medical attention whenever required. Defendant refused to furnish this service, and appellee was required to furnish and pay for it himself.

The cause was submitted to the jury on special issues and the jury found, first, that the appellant did not furnish a safe place to work; second, that the failure so to do was the proximate cause of the injury; third, that it did not supply the plaintiff 'with prompt and efficient medical attention and treatment for the injuries sustained by him in removing the baggage from the baggage car; fourth, the jury found the failure of appellant to furnish prompt and efficient attention and treatment for tire injuries sustained by him was the proximate cause of the amputation of the third finger on the left hand and the injury done; fifth, that $5,000 would he adequate compensation for all injuries suffered by appellee; sixth, that he did not assume the ordinary risk incident thereto; seventh, that he was not guilty of contributory negligence which contributed to or was the proximate cause of his injury in the manner of placing the truck at the ear for the purpose of unloading the baggage therefrom; eighth, that appellee exercised and used such caution to take care of and treat his finger as a person of ordinary prudence and caution would have used, under the same circumstances, after the alleged injury to same on May 29, 1921.

From the foregoing it will be seen that the court submitted to the jury every question of negligence and liability that could possibly arise in the case, and the jury has answered by finding every fact against appellant.

Such being the state of this record, unless some error of law has been committed by the trial court, the judgment should be affirmed. The evidence supports the findings of the jury.

Under appellant’s first proposition, it is conceded that it was incumbent upon it to furnish a safe place to work. It is not for us to say, as a matter of law, that the place furnished was safe or not; that was for the jury to ascertain. It cannot be said that building a drain on the ground to carry off water from the premises along the track of the railroad where the car stops to let off baggage was, as a physical fact, dangerous itself, but it may become so in its use. There was no underground drainage or pipes, or covering over the ditch to prevent the wheels of a loaded truck from sliding in while appellee was at work. Clearly, the trunks were not unloaded upon any platform, but out of the car onto trucks standing on the ground beside the track. The drain has been filled since the injury. The drain was a depression made to drain water between all the tracks and carry it out in the *1029 street, or at any rate of sufficient size to drain water out. It was a ditch dug across these tracks going out into the low land, about 4 or 6 inches deep, about 2 or 3 feet wide. There was no platform where he was unloading baggage. The car was on the third track from what they call the platform. The jury found that the place was unsafe for the purpose of unloading trunks upon trucks, and, as they were on the ground and hearing .and seeing .the witnesses testify, we shall not interfere with that finding.

It is true the drainage ditch had been there quite a while, and had been worn in. While not, perhaps, inherently dangerous, yet the wheel of the truck slipped in the ditch as the porter was loading, causing his hand to be jammed in the door held between it and the truck or trunk on the truck, so that he was injured.

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Bluebook (online)
289 S.W. 1027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-antonio-a-p-ry-co-v-mason-texapp-1926.