San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway Co. v. Lindsey

65 S.W. 668, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 316, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 275
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 20, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 65 S.W. 668 (San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway Co. v. Lindsey) 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 & Aransas Pass Railway Co. v. Lindsey, 65 S.W. 668, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 316, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 275 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

JAKES, Chief Justice.

Charles Lindsey sued appellant on account of personal injuries received by him, alleging that he was employed by said railway company as engineer, and while in the act of alighting from his engine in the performance of his duties the step of the engine turned,, which threw him to the ground, causing his injuries.

The defenses were general denial, assumed risks, and contributory negligence. Verdict for plaintiff for $20,000.

The first and principal question presented is the refusal of the charge r “In this case the evidence is insufficient to entitle plaintiff to recover herein, and you will return a verdict for the defendant.” This requires us to review the testimony in the light of appellant’s proposition, which is: “The master is not an insurer of the safety of his servant, but is only required to exercise ordinary care to furnish him a reasonably safe-place to work, and -the law presumes that the master has met these requirements. It follows, therefore, that the happening of an accident resulting in injury to a servant raises no presumption of negligence on the part of the master, and the servant seeking to recover for such injuries must establish by proof that the master was guilty of negligence- and that he himself was not in fault but exercised due care.”

■ The propositions embodied in the above may be put thus: Plaintiff is required to prove negligence of the master; second, the absence of contributory negligence; and third, the proof of negligence must consist of something more than the mere happening of the accident. We may eliminate the second of these by merely remarking that in cases-like this the burden of- proving contributory negligence is on the defendant.

To intelligently discuss the questions, the facts will have to be given, and we do this as briefly as possible. The trouble arose from the step becoming loose. Plaintiff testified that after his fall he examined the step and described its condition thus: “The rod of the step which I stepped on went up through a casting; it is a rod about 1 y2 inches in diameter which comes down from the back part of the cab, and about, halfway from the cab to the footrest it goes through a thick heavy casting, and just above this casting there is a nut which screws down, and under the casting is a collar, and when the nut is screwed down tight *318 that draws the collar up tight and prevents it from being loose; I found it loose and there was nothing to prevent it from turning.”

The evidence was certainly sufficient to show that the nut once becoming loose, the step was liable to turn when stepped upon. A device was shown, known as the dowel pin, which, if properly inserted, rendered the step incapable of turning, although the nut became loose; and it may be said to be a fact established by all the witnesses that if a dowel pin had been properly applied to the step, it would not have turned, although the screw may have been loose. There was testimony both ways as to the presence of a dowel pin on this occasion, and the jury would have been warranted in finding either way on this subject. That the •step turned with plaintiff and he was thereby thrown, was shown by evidence.

The evidence seems to be clear upon the following facts: That plaintiff, on December 10, 1899, about 2 o’clock, came with this engine from Yoakum to San Antonio, about 120 miles (in switching, etc.), having • occasion to use this step frequently on the trip. The step was firm when he left Yoakum, also when he reached San Antonio. At San Antonio he turned in a trip card reporting the condition of the engine, not reporting anything in respect to this step, as it was all right as far as he .knew. This was on the morning of the 11th. In the afternoon of the •same day he was ordered out again on this engine, and made an examination of the engine; it was all right as far as he could see, and the step •was not loose. The accident occurred at the Guadalupe water tank, about nineteen miles from Yoakum. The last time he had occasion to use the step before reaching the tank was at Kennedy, and there "it was all right; it wasn’t loose.” It was loose at the tank, and turned with. plaintiff and injured him. The engine had been in defendant’s service •a long time, at least since 1889.

As to inspection, we quote from the witness D. S. Hackett, who appears to have inspected the engine before it left San Antonio: "The last dime I examined the condition of that step was the morning of the day the engine left. I have a distinct recollection of having examined the ■engine that morning, because I am in the habit of going through the roundhouse every morning and examining every engine that is there; I know that from my custom, and it was impressed upon my mind by the accident, and I was up and down on that engine several times that morning. There is nothing there to wear the threads of that nut; there is no pressure whatever on it. A nut gets loose on any bolt, and will naturally work around until it comes off; I don’t know any reason why it ■should work around, unless the nut was loosened on there. I don’t think the nut would be loosened without somebody loosening it, unless it was put on slacker than we usually put them on. I don’t think using the. •step would have a tendency to make it work loose, unless it was very slack, and in that case you would discover it when you went to use the step. It is a very rare occurrence that engine steps get loose. The thickness of the iron through which the rod extends is about 4 1-2 or 5 *319 inches. If it were to become incased in rust it would be all the tighter, but the rust itself would not hold the rod in place—the jar of the engine would throw that out. I state that the jar of an engine and the constant using of the step would not have a tendency to loosen the nut, if properly tightened up. It must have been tightened up well, if it was tight on leaving San Antonio. I did not examine that particular nut to see whether it was tight, but know it was, because I tried the step by kicking it. I remember having kicked this particular step that morning, because I make a practice of doing it a dozen times a day, and because of the injury to Mr. Lindsey, which drew my attention to that particular engine.”

In reference to the use of the dowel pin, it was in evidence that the engines did not come from the factory equipped with same, but that defendant caused them to be attached,—there was evidence that defendant had been doing this five or six years previous to the trial, and that this engine was so equipped; but plaintiff testified that defendant did not begin using the device until after he was injured, and he testified that this step had no dowel pin, which fact he discovered after he was hurt, and he also denied that the appliance brought by defendant into court, which had the dowel pin, was the one that was on his engine.

In reference to safety of the steps with screw nut only for fastening, there was evidence that these engines were of standard make; that the turning of an engine step is a very rare and extraordinary occurrence; that this method of fastening steps was the usual one; and the inspector, Hackett, testified as above quoted as to the necessity of keeping the nut screwed tight, with respect to its safety.

As to negligence on the part of defendant: .

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.W. 668, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 316, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-antonio-aransas-pass-railway-co-v-lindsey-texapp-1901.