St. Louis, S. F. & T. Ry. Co. v. Overturf

163 S.W. 639, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 549
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 24, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 163 S.W. 639 (St. Louis, S. F. & T. Ry. Co. v. Overturf) 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
St. Louis, S. F. & T. Ry. Co. v. Overturf, 163 S.W. 639, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 549 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

RASBURY, J.

Appellee sued for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received by him while performing his duties as boiler maker’s helper for appellant, and upon trial recovered verdict followed by judgment for $750, from which this appeal is taken.

The ground of negligence urged against appellant was the detaching of the tender from an engine in the fire box of which ap-pellee was at work at the time of the accident; it being further alleged that it -was appellant’s custom to notify those at work in the fire box that the tender had been or .would be detached. The facts hereafter stated will disclose what relation the detaching of the tender from the engine bore to ap-pellee’s injuries, and for that reason a further statement of appellee’s pleading is unnecessary.

Appellant met the allegations of the petition by the general denial, plea charging contributory negligence, and the further plea that appellee assumed the risk of the accident which brought about his injuries in that it was usual and customary to remove tenders from engines while its employés were engaged in the work in which appellee was engaged at the time he was injured, without giving notice to employés engaged at work in the fire box of the engine, and that appellee knew there was no rule requiring such notice, and that it was the usual custom to remove tenders without notice.

The record of the evidence sustains the following essential facts; Appellee was in the employ of appellant in- the capacity of boiler maker’s helper. On December 18, 1911, he assisted a boiler maker to do some work in the fire box of the engine upon which he was injured. When he went into the fire box of the engine, a tender was uncoupled thereto, and he entered upon the engine and into the fire box by going up the steps on the tender, crossing from the tender to the cab of the engine on an apron which was fastened to the cab of the engine by hinges and rested over on the tender, the purpose of which was to furnish a walk way for parties passing from the tender to the cab of the engine, which was the usual and customary way of getting on the engine, and thence into the fire box. The usual way for employés working on the engine to leave it was to pass from the deck of the engine over the apron between the engine and tender and thence down the steps on the tender. There was, at the time appellee entered the fire box, a storm curtain fastened at the top of the engine cab which extended down and reached within two or three inches of the floor of the engine cab at the outer edge thereof between the engine cab and tender. The engine was standing over a concrete pit some two or three feet deep below the rails upon which it was standing; the floor of the cab being some 7 or 8 feet above the rails, making the bottom of the pit 10 or 11 feet below the floor of the cab of the engine. During the time appellee was in the fire" box at his work, members of what was known as the tank gang uncoupled the tender from the engine and by use of pinch bars moved the tender some seven or eight feet back from the engine. Having finished his work about noon, appellee came out of the fire box of the engine, where he was at work, onto the cab of the engine, and assuming the tender was yet coupled thereto, and intending to walk across the apron onto the tender and down the steps thereof, stepped from the cab of the engine and fell into the pit below.

The evidence was conflicting on the issue of whether there was a rule requiring notice to be given of the intention to move the tender as detailed and as to whether it was usual and customary to move it without notice. *641 There is testimony in the record sufficient to sustain a finding by the jury either way. There was also a conflict in the testimony relating to the extent of appellee’s injury, but the evidence in that behalf will in like manner support the finding of the jury.

The first assignment of error complains of the refusal of the court to allow appellant’s requested charge by which the jury was instructed that, when appellee entered the service of appellant, he assumed the risks of the manner in which appellant usually and customarily performed its work, and, if it was the usual and customary method and practice of appellant’s employés to disconnect and move the tender of an engine away without notifying any other employés engaged at work in the fire box of the engine that they had done so, to find for appellant. The only issue'of negligence presented to the jury upon trial and raised by the evidence was that of removing the tender from the engine and being the identical issue presented by the charge refused by the court. It has been repeatedly held and is now settled law that the defendant is entitled to have presented to the jury any specified group of facts developed upon trial, which, if true, would in law establish a given defense, provided, of course, that such requested charge is not substantially covered by the main charge or other allowed special charges. G., C. & S. F. R. Co. v. Shieder, 88 Tex. 152, 30 S. W. 902, 28 L. R. A. 538; M., K. & T. Ry. Co. v. McGlamory, 89 Tex. 635, 35 S. W. 1058; M., K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Rogers, 91 Tex. 52, 40 S. W. 956; Dallas Consolidated St. Ry. Co. v. McGrew, 115 S. W. 344.

The rule being as we have stated, our duty necessarily narrows to ascertaining whether the court in its main charge substantially complied with the rule involved by the refused special charge. We conclude it did. The court in its main charge, after defining negligence, ordinary care, and contributory negligence, told the jury that: “When plaintiff entered the service of the defendant in the capacity of boiler maker’s helper, he assumed all the risks or danger ordinarily incident to such employment, except that he did not assume any risks or danger, if any, arising from the negligence of defendant, its agents or employés, unless he knew at the time of such negligence, if any, and appreciated the danger therefrom, or in the ordinary performance of the duties of his employment must necessarily have known of such negligence and the danger incident thereto.” Then came the instruction in the charge that appellant was bound to exercise only ordinary care to prevent injury to its employés, and then only in case the employé exercised ordinary care for his own safety. Following this, the only issue of negligence, as we have said, which was raised by the evidence was submitted to the jury from the standpoint of appellee’s evidence, wherein the jury were instructed that if they believed from the evidence “that it was the custom of defendant, while its employés were working in and about said engine, if it became necessary to move the tender therefrom, * * * to notify the employes engaged in working in and about the engine that such tender would be removed,” to find for appellee. After such instruction the court then proceeds: “On the other hand, ⅜ * * if you believe from the evidence that it was not the custom for the defendant or its employés to notify employés working in and about the engine that the tender was going to be moved ⅞ ⅛ * then y0U gn(j £or thg defendant.” As indicated by the asterisks, this issue was submitted along with others of appellant’s defenses in the seventh paragraph of the court’s charge in the same manner that appellee’s side of the case was presented in the sixth paragraph. Thus it clearly appears that the fact constituting the defense which, if true and accepted so by the jury, would in law establish the defense of assumed risk was before the jury for whatever it was worth.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 S.W. 639, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-s-f-t-ry-co-v-overturf-texapp-1914.