Smith v. Webb

181 S.W. 814, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1251
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 2, 1915
DocketNo. 15. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 181 S.W. 814 (Smith v. Webb) 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
Smith v. Webb, 181 S.W. 814, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1251 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

BROOKE, J.

This was a suit brought by R. W. Webb against C. L. Smith and others, in the district court of Jefferson county, Tex., for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him on the 13th day of August, 1911, while in the employment of said defendants as fireman and helper in the drilling of a certain oil well in the Vinton oil field in Calcasieu parish, La. At the time of the filing of this suit, plaintiff alleged that he resided in Jefferson county, Tex., and that he had not resided in the state of Louisiana from the 1st day of August, 1911; that plaintiff was employed to fire the boiler and look after the fuel tank which furnished oil for the boiler; that the fuel tank was an upground wood tank about 12 or 14 feet high; that a ladder was placed against same by defendants, to provide a way to ascend the tank for the purpose of inspecting the flow of oil therein, so as to see when the tank was sufficiently full of oil. It is further alleged that said plaintiff, in the course of his duties, on the date mentioned, went up said ladder to see how much oil was in the fuel tank, and that while he was at the top of said tank, and was leaning over same, so that he could look into the tank, and see how much oil was in same, the ladder slipped and fell, whereby he was injured.

The grounds of negligence on which plaintiff based his claim of action are as follows: (1) That defendants and their agents placed or leaned said ladder against the tank, and negligently failed and omitted to secure same to the tank, so that it would not slip or fall. (2) That defendants negligently failed and omitted to warn or notify plaintiff that said ladder was not fastened, but was merely standing against said tank. (3) That therein defendants negligently failed to provide plaintiff with a reasonably safe place to work.

In their first amended original answer, upon which they went to trial, defendants, after general demurrer, answered fully as required under the then statute, to the allegations in each paragraph of -plaintiff’s petition, substantially as follows: That said ladder was so placed by either Webb himself, or another employe, and that the same rested one end upon the ground and one against the fuel tank near the top thereof, same being about 10 feet high. That plaintiff, at the time of his injuries, had been working for the defendants 13 days at the same job. That the ladder was not attached to the tank, and that plaintiff knew that it was not so attached, and that it was customary in the Vinton fields and other surrounding fields, under the same and similar circumstances, not to fasten such ladder, .and that, if said ladder should have been fastened, it was the duty of the plaintiff to do so. That plaintiff was not caused to fall through the slipping of the ladder, but by plaintiff falling or slipping off said ladder through fault and negligence on his own part, in the manner in which he went up and down on said ladder. That his injuries were the result of dangers ordinarily incident to the work of his employment, and were the direct result of risks negligently assumed by him. That at the time he entered upon the duties of his employment he knew that the ladder was not attached or fastened to said tank, or by the exercise of ordinary care, in the course of his work, during the period of his employment, to wit, about two weeks, he could and would have discovered said ladder was not fastened or attached, and that, if he had exercised due care in the discharge of his own particular duties, he would necessarily have discovered said conditions, and the danger thereof, if any. That at the time of his entering on the employment, he was a man of large and long experience in the oil business generally, and especially as helper in drilling wells in the work in which he was then employed, and was fully acquainted with the usual and customary ways of carrying on said work in the oil fields at Vinton, and in surrounding fields of Louisiana, Texas, and Oklahoma, and that he actually knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care, in the discharge of his own particular duties, would necessarily have learned, that other operators, or at least a majority of them, did not usually and customarily secure or fasten the ladder to the fuel tank, under like conditions or circumstances. That plaintiff had between seven and ten years’ experience in such work, and in other work in and around the oil fields aforesaid, and must thereby have acquired either actual or constructive knowledge of the customary manner of carrying on said work under the same and like conditions, and that it was not customary to attach said ladder to the fuel tank. That even an inexperienced man, in the course of said work, in going *816 up and down on said ladder to look at the oil in said tank, would necessarily discover and know that the ladder was not attached or fastened to the tank. In further answer to said suit, the defendants further plead the prescription law of Louisiana, to wit, what is known in Texas as the law of limitation, showing to the court that at the time of the plaintiff’s injuries the common law did not then nor has ever obtained in the state of Louisiana, but on the contrary, what is known as the civil law, same being the civil law as adopted, incorporated, or modified by the statutory law of said state, was then and now is and has always been the law in the state of Louisiana. That the law of Louisiana applicable to the facts and circumstances of this case and in general to cases of personal injury, resulting from negligence, was then and there, and is still, regulated and controlled and is based on the statute of said state, and specifically setting forth verbatim the laws relating thereto. Defendants in their answer alleged, and throughout the trial of said cause urgently insisted, that said cause of action, if any there ever was, is based and founded upon the statutes of the state of Louisiana, and that the prescription laws of that state not only make the right unenforceable after the prescribed period of one year from the date of damage, but totally extinguish and discharge it, and that by said statute, and as construed by the highest court of the state of Louisiana, both said right of action and remedy were totally and absolutely extinguished, after the lapse of one year from the date of damage, no suit having been filed to enforce the right, either in Louisiana or in the state of Texas, or in any other state, and that, as shown by the plaintiff’s petition, the injuries occurred on August 13, 1911, and that he did not file his suit to recover for said damages herein until August 5, 1913, long after the lapse of one year from the date of said injuries, and lacking just eight days of being two years from the date thereof. Wherefore it was alleged that the prescription law of Louisiana had run, and that on and after the 13th day of August, 1912, said cause of action and the remedy therefor were absolutely and totally extinguished. Defendants further alleged, in defense, that it was usual and customary, among oil operators of ordinary prudence, under the same and like conditions, in the Vinton oil field, and other oil localities in the states of Louisiana, Texas, and Oklahoma, and elsewhere, not to attach ladders to fuel tanks which are small and low, making it not unsafe to carry on the work without having the ladder stationary or fastened, but that, on the contrary, in said localities, it was customary and usual for such oil operators generally to carry on the work as it was being carried on by the defendants on the occasion in question.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 S.W. 814, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-webb-texapp-1915.