St. Louis Southwestern Railway Co. v. Acker

99 S.W. 121, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 560, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 561
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 22, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 99 S.W. 121 (St. Louis Southwestern Railway Co. v. Acker) 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 Southwestern Railway Co. v. Acker, 99 S.W. 121, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 560, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 561 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by appellee against appellant to recover damages -for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of appellant’s employes.

The evidence shows that appellee, at the request of the conductor of a train on appellant’s road, got into a freight car which was partially filled with crates containing tomatoes, for the purpose of building said crates in position while the car was being switched in the mailing up of the train. While thus engaged the operatives of the train cut the car loose from the engine and “kicked” it on to a switch track where it collided with other cars standing on said track with such force and *561 violence as to throw plaintiff down upon the floor of the car and precipitate upon him the crates of tomatoes which were piled up in the end of the car and which plaintiff1 was .holding in position. o

The injuries thus received by plaintiff, as detailed by his physician and himself, are as follows: His physician testified: “He (plaintiff) had several cuts and bruises and contused wounds and dirt was all in them and he had a cut over the left ear about 1% inches long through the skin, and the right eye had a contused or punctured wound just in the lash, and the whole side of his face was black and blood shot, under his eye was more so, it was swollen quite a good deal at the time, and he had an injury to his right elbow, and he had three bruises on one leg and one on the other, and had a bruise—I believe it was on his left shin. I believe that was about the extent of his injuries. He had fallen on his elbow and it was in relaxed condition, it was a punctured wound that partly severed the triceps muscles from the original and made a punctured wound at the elbow; it was in the elbow joint; if the arm had been extended, of course it would have been back of the elbow, but being flexed it was right over the joint. It didn’t open the joint but was deep into the tissue of the tendon, or triceps muscle. The muscle I mentioned is the large muscle near the back part of the arm. . . . The puncture was through the inner end of the triceps muscle or leader, it reaches down and inserts into the bony part of the lower arm and it laps over the elbow joint and makes the hinge. His arm below the elbow was also injured. The treatment of the elbow and the experience I had with it demonstrated the correctness of the opinion I formed when I first examined the wound—only when I first went to him I thought the bone was broken off, but it was not; the back part of the ulna, or this ■ bone that makes the hinge over the bone and makes the elbow joint, I thought it was broke, but it was not. I first bandaged his arm in a flexed condition in order to keep the muscles in front from drawing it out of shape and to bring the ends of the broken bones end to end, but this muscle being cut pulled it in so I was forced the next day to let the arm down. ... I have examined the plaintiff from time to time since. I kept close watch on him for about a month and after that from time to time I kept watch on it. I don’t think the arm has recovered its normal strength, but it has been a general improvement. Some day his arm will be all right. I think it will be a year at least until his arm is all right. I have seen Mr. Acker with the boils and have opened a few of them. I would judge these abcesses are caused from bruised tissues. I think these boils were cause from the bruises on his shin, eye, leg, etc., caused bad blood and the tissues became infected and that caused at least the first crop of boils and the first crop reinfected for the second crop. There might always be some little defect about his arm.”

Plaintiff testified: “I suffered from my head and elbow and legs hurting me. T have suffered since that time. My head seems sore more or less yet. The back of my head pains me some. I don’t know whether any of the crates fell on the back of my head or not. ... It has been four, five or six months since the accident. I have not done much of anything since that time, because I have not been able. My arm has *562 kept me from some work that I could have done and I have had some boils that has kept me from work. I don’t know how many boils I have had, but between 25 and 50. Most of the boils1 have been on the back of my neck and some up in the edge of my hair, and one or two on my face, and one or two on my leg, and one on my right arm below the elbow. . . . I have tried to work some since the injury. I undertook to haul some rock to build a cellar and my arm' gave down on me and I had to quit. My right arm gave down on me. That is the same elbow that was injured. That elbow has bothered me more or less since the injury, especially about hitting it. If I hit it against anything it seems like it deadens it. I am not talking about what we call the Tunny bone.’ If I strike my elbow against anything it hurts. I can work that elbow all right. I couldn’t say I have the same free use of it as I have of the other. I can’t work it quick without hurting it. When I undertook to haul these rocks my arm got sore and stiff to the extent that I had to quit that work. I suppose I gathered com four or five days since the injury. Gathering com hurts my arm more or less, but not as bad as lifting with it. I suppose it was a month and a half or two months after the injury when I tried to haul the rock. That difficulty I have with my arm is not an occasional matter, but I feel it all the time. . . . When I try to work with that arm it gets sore and stiff and aches. I don’t think it is as strong as my left arm. My left elbow does not get that way. I didn’t have that trouble before the injury. I was mistaken this morning when I said I had not had any of those boils lately. I have one coming on my right leg now.”

Plaintiff also testified that several tiers of crates of tomatoes piled one upon another fell upon him and that the weight of each crate was from 22 to 27 pounds, and in this connection stated that he was a tomato grower. He further stated that before he received these injuries he was an active man, "and not a man of leisure. I farmed. I worked myself. I worked regularly.”

The trial court gave the jury the following instruction as to the elements of damage to be considered by them in event they found for the plaintiff:

"If 3rou find for the plaintiff the measure of his damages, which you should find and state in your verdict, would1 be such sum of money allowed now as you believe from the evidence will be a just and reasonable compensation to him for the bodily pain and mental anguish, if any, or either, he has suffered or has or will suffer, and for his loss or injury, if any, expressed in dollars, from inability, or diminished ability, to labor and earn money or its equivalent, by reason and as a result of the negligence of defendant, such as is above mentioned.”

The verdict was a general one in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $1,000. Appellant assigns error on this -charge on the ground that there was no evidence from which the jury could ascertain with any degree of certainty the damage, if an}-, sustained by plaintiff by reason of his diminished capacity "to labor and earn money” and therefore that element of damage should not have been submitted to the jury. In the case of Houston & T. C. Ry. Co. v. Bird, 48 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
99 S.W. 121, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 560, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-southwestern-railway-co-v-acker-texapp-1906.