Sherman Oil & Cotton Co. v. Stewart

42 S.W. 241, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 59, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 317
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 20, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 42 S.W. 241 (Sherman Oil & Cotton Co. v. Stewart) 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
Sherman Oil & Cotton Co. v. Stewart, 42 S.W. 241, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 59, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 317 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

KEY, Associate Justice.

This is a suit for damages for personal injuries, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for $1000. The defendant has appealed. The very full, accurate, and satisfactory charge given by the trial judge shows the nature of the suit and the issues of fact upon which the rights of the parties depend. Said charge is as follows:

“Gentlemen of the jury: The plaintiff, J. D. Stewart, claims that while he was in the employment of the defendant, the Sherman Oil and Cotton Company, in the capacity of a laborer, he was injured by the falling of a block on him from a derrick. Fie claims that his injury was caused by the failure on the part of John Slusher, the foreman' of defendant, to exercise ordinary care for his, plaintiff’s, safety, while he, plaintiff, was discharging the duties of his employment. He claims that this failure on the part of said Slusher to exercise ordinary care for his, plaintiff’s, safety, consisted in causing J. M. Alexander and Joe Hamilton, two of plaintiff’s fellow workmen, to remove certain blocks at the top of the derrick, -while plaintiff was winding up one of the ropes of said derrick on a windlass beneath. He further claims that the said Slusher failed to exercise ordi: nary care for plaintiff’s safety because he, the said Slusher, knew, or ought to have known, that J. M. Alexander was a careless man and reckless, and a person unsafe for other persons to work with, and so knowing or having notice thereof, the said Slusher employed the said Alexander to work with plaintiff and the other workmen, and continued to keep said Alexander in his employment with plaintiff and other workmen after he, the said Slusher, knew or had notice of said carelessness and recklessness of said Alexander. He seeks to recover damages on account of said injuries.
“The defendant denies that the said Slusher failed to exercise ordinary care for plaintiff’s safety in any of the particulars claimed by plaintiff. Defendant further denies that plaintiff’s injury wag caused by any failure on the part of said Slusher to exercise ordinary care for plaintiff’s safety, but claims that plaintiff’s injury was caused by one of the risks ordinarily incident to the work in which plaintiff was engaged, or through an acci *61 dent, or through the carelessness of one of plaintiff’s fellow workmen, or through plaintiff’s own failure to exercise ordinary care for his safety.
“You. are instructed as follows: 1. It is the duty of the master to exercise ordinary care, which means the care that a person of ordinary prudence would use under the particular circumstances, for the safety of the servant while the servant is engaged in performing the duties of such servant’s employment; and it is a part of the duty of the master to exercise ordinary care in the selection and employment of other servants who may work with such servant. If the master fails to exercise ordinary care for the safety of the servant while the servant is engaged in performing the duties of such servant’s employment, and thereby causes an injury to the servant, he is liable to the servant in damages on account of such injury, unless the servant himself has failed to exercise ordinary care for his own safety and has thereby helped to cause his own injury. But the master does not insure the safety of the servant while the servant is engaged in performing the duties of his employment, nor does he insure the carefulness and competency of coservants. If the master has exercised ordinary care for the safety of the servant while the servant is engaged in performing the duties of his employment, and has exercised ordinary care in the selection and employment of the servant’s coservants, and has exercised ordinary care with regard to retaining such coservants in employment, he has discharged his full duty under the law to the servant and is not liable to the servant in damages, no matter how badly injured the servant may be while engaged in the performance of the duties of the employment.
“2. When a servant accepts employment of a master, he thereby assumes all the risks of being injured ordinarily incident to the kind of work in which he is engaged, and one of the risks so assumed by the servant is the risk of being injured by a failure on the part of one of his coservants to exercise ordinary care, or, indeed, any kind of care, as well as the risk of being injured by accident; therefore, if the servant is injured by any of these things, and not through the failure of the master to exercise ordinary care, as hereinbefore stated, the servant can not recover any damages from the master on account of such injury unless the master has failed to exercise ordinary care for the injured servant’s safety in employing or in retaining in employment the servant whose want of care caused the injury.
“3. It is also the duty of the servant to exercise ordinary care for his own safety while he is engaged in the performance of the duties of his employment; and if he fails to do this, and thereby helps to cause his own injury, he can not recover any damages of the master, no matter how badly he may have been injured, nor no matter how much the master may have been to blame, for, in such a case, the law does not permit any inquiry to be made as to who is the more to blame, the master or the servant, but simply denies any recovery to the servant.
“4. In law, every one that employs another, whether an individual or a corporation, is called the master, and every one who accepts em *62 ployment is called a servant. Thus, in this case, the Sherman Oil and Cotton Company, the defendant, was the master, and the plaintiff, J. D. Stewart, was the servant. The law makes no discrimination whatever, with respect to the duties hereinbefore mentioned, between an individual and a corporation. A farmer, a merchant, or a carpenter owes precisely the same duties to his servants that a corporation does to its servants.
“5. Bearing carefully in mind the foregoing instructions, if you be-hove from the evidence that the plaintiff, while in the employment of the defendant in the capacity of a laborer, was placed by John Slusher, defendant’s foreman, at work winding up a rope on the windlasss to a derrick, and that, while the.plaintiff was so. engaged, the said Slusher directed or caused two of plaintiff’s coservants, J. M. Alexander and Joe Hamilton, to go up and remove some ropes and blocks, commonly called snatch-blocks, from the top of said derrick, and that, while the said Hamilton and the said Alexander were so removing said ropes and snatch-blocks and plaintiff was so winding the rope on said windlass, one of said blocks fell and injured plaintiff, you will find for the plaintiff, if you further believe.from the evidence that, in. so directing and causing said Hamilton and Alexander to so remove said ropes and blocks from the top of said derrick while plaintiff was at work beneath winding said windlass, the said Slusher failed to exercise ordinary care for plaintiff’s safety and that this failure .on the part of said Slusher to exercise ordinary care caused plaintiff’s injury, and further believe from the evidence that plaintiff himself, at the time he was injured, was exercising ordinary care for his own safety.
“6. Or, again, if you believe from the evidence that J. M.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.W. 241, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 59, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherman-oil-cotton-co-v-stewart-texapp-1897.