Schaff v. Hendrich

207 S.W. 543, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 14, 1918
DocketNo. 8933.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 207 S.W. 543 (Schaff v. Hendrich) 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
Schaff v. Hendrich, 207 S.W. 543, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1207 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

C. E. Sehaff was duly appointed receiver of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company of Texas by the United States District Court of the Northern District of Texas, and under and by virtue of the orders of that court he operated the railway of that company, and also that of the Wichita Falls & Northwestern Railway Company of Texas, which latter line had been leased by the railway company first mentioned.

On January 2, 1917, E. P. Hendrich, as an employó of the receiver, was working in the roundhouse of the Wichita Falls & Northwestern Railway Company of Texas, in the city of Wichita Falls, in the capacity of foreman of a tank gang, the duties of which gang included the work of removing wheels from tanks or tenders of locomotives and replacing them with new ones. In order to perform that service the tank would be uncoupled from the engine, then jacked up so that the old wheels or trucks could be removed and replaced with new one's. This work was done over a pit in the roundhouse, spanned by the track over which the locomotive and the tank would be placed. In cleaning the locomotive by blowing it out with steam, water would be discharged into the pit, and in order to get rid of this water a drainpipe was constructed, which led off from the pit. Prior to the accident hereinafter related, this drainpipe had become obstructed to such an extent that the floor of the pit, which was covered with cinders, was rendered wet and slippery to any one working therein in the discharge of the duties of plaintiff’s employment.

On or about the date mentioned above, plaintiff and other members of his tank gang undertook to replace the wheels of one of the engine tanks with new ones, and preparatory to so doing the engine and tank were placed over the pit. The tank was then uncoupled from the engine and jacked up so as to allow the removal of the wheels or trucks thereunder for the purpose of replacing them with new ones. While plaintiff was in the pit and assisting other em-ployés in rolling out the old wheels after the tank had been jacked up, and while pushing on the wheels in order to move them, his foot slipped on the wet cinders in the bottom of the pit, and as a result he fell, his breast striking against the flange of one of the wheels of the truck which he' was then moving.

Hendrich instituted this suit against the receiver to recover damages for personal injuries which he alleged he sustained as a result of said fall, upon allegations that the defendant was guilty of negligence in allowing the bottom of the pit to become wet and slippery, and hence had failed to discharge his legal duty to the plaintiff to exercise ordinary care to furnish him a safe place to work. From a judgment in plaintiff’s favor on a trial before a jury the defendant has appealed.

One of the defenses urged by the receiver was that at the time of plaintiff’s alleged injury he was engaged in duties incident to interstate commerce, and that he could not recover because he had assumed the risks of his injury; but the finding of the jury upon that issue was adverse to him. That issue was submitted to the jury in the court’s charge as a controverted issue of fact.

The first error assigned is to the refusal of the defendant’s request for a peremptory instruction to the jury to find in his favor upon that issue.

The proof showed without controversy that the tank or tender upon which plaintiff was working at the time of his alleged injury was attached to engine No. 220 which, together with the tender, was then, and had been for some time prior thereto, used exclusively in hauling passenger, baggage, and express trains between Wichita Falls, Tex., and towns in the state of Oklahoma; and that such use of the locomotive and tender had been known to plaintiff for more than two years prior to the alleged accident.

[1] That plaintiff knew of the slippery condition of the bottom of the pit and of the risk of slipping and falling by reason thereof in performing the services in which he was engaged at the time of his alleged injury was conclusively proven by his own testimony. He testified; That he was first en *545 gaged as one of the yard gang around the same roundhouse in the year 1912, during which year he frequently saw engines blow out steam and water into the pit. During the month of October, 1914. he went to work as a helper on the tank gang, which gang was doing the same work that was being done at the time of his alleged injury; and that he continued in that employment up to the date of the accident, having become foreman of the tank gang in the meantime; and that he was working on the tank of engine No. 220 at the time of the accident. He further testified as follows:

“On the 2d day of January, when I got hurt, I was putting in a new pair of wheels on the tank of this engine, I was doing this because the old ones were reported to be taken out. * * *
“Yes, sir; I had charge of that job, and I had exclusive control of all about it, and how to do it.
“Yes, sir; I did tell those men with me to take those wheels out and how to take them out, but I took them out according to instructions that I had from the foreman. Yes, sir; the foreman was there at the time; he was not right there at the place that I was working at that time, but I took the wheels out as I usually did. That ground had been slippery there as it' then was for some four or five months; I had seen it there during that time; and that evening, when I started to work there to take those wheels out, I saw that the ground was slippery there, and I realized that that ground was slippery at that time. I had known that the drain that drained the pits had stopped up for some six or seven months, and I knew that at that time that I went to work that evening on these wheels, and at that time I knew why the water was out there on those cinders. Still I had not made any complaint to the foreman particularly about it. I had told him that it was wet; I told Varley, the foreman, that it was wet and sloppy, and that it made it slippery, but I did not tell Varley that exactly the day that I got hurt. Yes, sir; I had told Varley that the ground was slippery, X had told him that three or four days beforehand, before I got hurt.
“That place was slippery there all day long that day that I went to work on those wheels, the 2d day of January; and I knew that before I started to work that day, and I knew that it was in that slippery condition that day after dinner when I went to work there to take out those particular wheels. I knew that place was in that slippery condition at the time that X received my orders to do that work there. X knew at that time that it was slippery, and I never said anything to the foreman about it, not on that day; no, sir; but I did go ahead to work. As to whether I realized that I might slip there, will say that I had not studied about that at all. I had not slipped on that ground where it was slippery, not to amount to anything, before; but I had slipped there. At that time I might have known that I might slip again, before I went to work there that way. I do not know, could not tell the jury, how many times I had slipped on that ground there — I could not say. I have slipped there several times, but I have never hurt myself before. I could not give even an approximate answer as to how many times I had slipped and fallen there before, for I do not know.

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Related

Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Highfill
1930 OK 354 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
207 S.W. 543, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schaff-v-hendrich-texapp-1918.