Sears, Roebuck & Company v. Joe Wedgeworth

252 F.2d 759
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 1958
Docket16500_1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 252 F.2d 759 (Sears, Roebuck & Company v. Joe Wedgeworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sears, Roebuck & Company v. Joe Wedgeworth, 252 F.2d 759 (5th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

JONES, Circuit Judge.

Joe Wedgeworth worked for Sears, Roebuck and Company at its store in Waxahachie, Texas. The employer was not a subscriber to Workmen’s-Compensation insurance under the laws-of Texas. The employee, Wedgeworth,. claimed damages for injuries received while at work. To recover, in such a case, from a non-subscribing employer, negligence of the employer must be shown. The employer cannot assert contributory negligence, negligence of a fellow servant, or assumption of risk by the employee as defenses. Rev.Civ.Stat. Tex., art. 8306, § I; Vernon’s Ann.Civ. St.Tex. art. 8306, § 1.

The employer, Sears, Roebuck and Company, has appealed from a judgment entered against it after an adverse verdict in a suit of the employee who claimed two injuries, one in 1953 and the other in 1955, both to his back. In 1953 the Sears, Roebuck store manager at Waxahachie directed the appellee to move some batteries to a counter for the purpose of weighting down some newly laid linoleum until the adhesive fastening it to the counter had set. While so engaged, the appellee slipped, dropped the battery and fell with a back injury resulting. The floor had been treated with a preparation called microsheen and it was claimed by the appellee that he slipped because the floor was negligently permitted to be or remain oily or slick with this compound.

In 1955 the assistant manager of the store directed the appellee to take a pick-up truck to a freight depot and there get a shipment of pipe and deliver it to a farm. The truck had no pipe *761 racks. Appellee was unable to get the pipe tied under the truck and in lifting the pipe to get it on top of the truck he reinjured his back. It was claimed that there were two acts of negligence causing the earlier injury, failing to provide a safe place to work in causing the floor to become or permitting it to remain slippery, and in failing to provide assistance in moving the batteries. So also were two acts of negligence claimed as the cause of the 1955 injury, failure to have a rack on the truck on which to load and carry pipe, and failure to provide assistance.

The appellant claims and insists that we should determine that there was insufficient evidence of its negligence to ■establish liability for either injury. The ■appellee, on the occasion of the 1953 injury, was bringing the batteries, three at a time, on a hand truck from which he would lift them to the counter. On the fourth or fifth trip he had placed ■one battery on the counter and was in the process of picking up another when, as he testified:

“A. Well, right at the point, it is hard to say; when a man is moving a battery, I don’t know just exactly when the pain hit me, but in the process of handling this battery I got hurt. The pain hit me in the back as I was lifting the battery up.
“Q. Is that when your foot slipped? A. Yes.
“Q. Then what did you do with the battery when your foot slipped? A. I went down with the battery to the floor, dropped it to the floor.
“Q. Did you actually drop it? A. I just dropped it to the floor, I imagine I was a foot from the floor when I turned the battery loose, I imagine I was.
“Q. Anybody else around there at the time? A. Right then, nobody close by at that time.
“Q. Now, what did you do after you got your back hurt ? A. I went and told Mr. McGinnis I hurt my back.
“Q. Who was he? A. He was Assistant Manager.
“Q. Where did you tell him? A. I don’t remember the exact spot where he was; I left there and told him, because he asked me was I hurt very bad; I told him I didn’t think I was hurt very bad; so, he told me to take it easy and go in the battery house and service station and take it easy for the rest of the day.”

Later in his testimony he said:

“A. When I reached and got the battery and straightened up and my foot slipped, that is when the pain hit me in the back.
“Q. Your foot slipped first? A. Yes, sir; yes.
“Q. Then came the pain? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Then you dropped the battery? A. Yes, sir; in the operation you can’t tell exactly how it came about, in the operation of the lifting of the battery.
“Q. Are you presuming that, or do you remember? A. Sir?
“Q. Are you presuming that is what happened? A. I can’t recall everything that is done in an operation of that sort, only I know I got hurt in the operation of the lifting of the battery, and my foot slipped, all at the same time.”

There was no evidence as to when microsheen had last been applied to the floor before appellee was injured. The Sears, Roebuck store manager testified that microsheen was pretty slippery if too much was put on and slippery when it is first put on. He stated that when the microsheen dried the floor was normal and that it was customary to apply it in the afternoon after closing hours and it would dry overnight. The appellee’s injury occurred at about two o’clock in the afternoon. The micro-sheen was usually applied by the manager of the store and he was frequently assisted by the appellee. There was no *762 evidence as to when the microsheen was last applied prior to the accident. The oiling of a floor in a business establishment is a customary practice and is not negligence per se. 30-B Tex.Jur. 269, Negligence, § 69. The appellee testified that the floor was oak, that it was oily and he slipped because it was oily. The evidence was, we think, enough to make a case for the jury on the question whether the appellee sustained an injury from a fall caused by slipping on a floor which the appellant negligently caused to be or permitted to remain in an oily and dangerous condition. S. H. Kress & Company v. Telford, 5 Cir., 1957, 240 F.2d 70; Sears, Roebuck & Company v. Robinson, 154 Tex. 336, 280 S.W.2d 238; Furr’s Inc. v. Martin, Tex.Civ.App., 296 S.W.2d 607.

The appellee asserted that he should have had help in moving the batteries. The appellee, while conceding that handling and moving batteries was a part of his job, says that there was no evidence that he had ever before been required to move fifty batteries at any one time and so he should have been given help. The evidence as to the weight of the batteries is not definite but it appears that the maximum battery weight was not more than seventy pounds and might have been much less. From the appellee’s own testimony it is shown that he could not have handled more than fifteen batteries on the occasion of his claimed injury before he fell. The appellant asserts that help was present and available had it been needed by the appellee. We do not find in the record any satisfactory evidence to show that the appellee needed help. We do not find any evidence that he asked for help.

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252 F.2d 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sears-roebuck-company-v-joe-wedgeworth-ca5-1958.