St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. Weatherly

2 S.W.2d 555
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 9, 1928
DocketNo. 3472.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2 S.W.2d 555 (St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. Weatherly) 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 Ry. Co. v. Weatherly, 2 S.W.2d 555 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

HODGES, J.

In March, 1925, the appellee was employed as a machinist in the shops of the appellant at Tyler. On the morning of the 81st of that month one of his eyes was injured while he was engaged in tightening a nut on a superheater pipe attached to one of the appellant’s locomotive engines. He was using a hammer and chisel. A particle of the metal broke off and lodged in one of his eyes. The injury was such as ultimately resulted in the loss of the eye. This suit was filed to recover damages for that injury.

It is alleged that the railway company was guilty of negligence, first, in failing to furnish appellee with goggles for the protection of *557 his eyes while doing that character of work; second, in furnishing him a defective chisel; third, in requiring him to tighten the nut with a hammer and chisel; fourth, in failing to have removed some pipes adjacent to the nut which interfered with the use of a wrench.

Appellant answered hy general and special exceptions, a general denial, and a plea of contributory negligence. In this last-named plea it was alleged that the proper method of tightening the nut was by the use of a wrench, a method unattended by any danger; that the defendant was an experienced workman, knew the dangers of using a hammer and chisel under the circumstances, and was guilty of negligénee in selecting and using such tools.

The material facts which are not disputed are substantially as follows:

During the year 1925, and prior thereto, the appellant maintained rather extensive shops at Tyler, where a number of mechanics, belonging to different crafts, were employed to make needed repairs on its cars and locomotives. When locomotives were brought in from service on the road, they were placed in the roundhouse for inspection. If, upon examination, the inspector found any defects, these were noted by him on a card, and the card delivered to the foreman of the proper department, whosei duty it was to have the repairs called for made by subordinate mechanics. Usually the different mechanics engaged in repair work would call at the foreman’s desk and get the cards which had been prepared by the inspector. If only light repairs were called for, such as might be made in a short time, the work was done in the roundhouse. When heavy repairs, those requiring more time, were called for, the locomotive was sent elsewhere. When light repairs were to be made on an engine registered for service, and subject to be called out at any time, the work was called a “hot shot job.”

The appellee had been in the service of the .appellant as a machinist more than a year prior to his injury. Before entering the service of the appellant, he had worked elsewhere and may be classed as an experienced machinist. It is not claimed in this appeal that he was inexperienced or did not understand the character of work assigned him, or did -not know the proper tools that should be used in doing that work. Early on the morning of the day he was injured, or some time during the night before, .engine No. 570 was brought in from the road and placed in the roundhouse for inspection. The notations made by the inspector who examined the engine called for several minor repairs, among them tightening a loose packing nut on the superheated pipe. The duty of making those repairs was .assigned to the appellee, and he began work about 7 o’clock in the morning. The record indicates that, when he began work that morning, he called at the desk of the foreman, and was given the card prepared by the inspector, and that no other instructions were then given him as to how the repairs should be made, or what tools should be used by him in doing the work. The evidence shows that each machinist usually carried with him a kit of tools, such as he expected to use in doing the ■ work to which he had been assigned. When other tools were needed at any stage of the work, the machinists were allowed time in which to procure them. Each machinist was furnished with a helper, or subordinate, who might be sent for other tools needed during the progress of the work. Appellee’s helper was a colored man named Morris, who was present at the time the injury occurred.

Engine No. 570 was an oil burner, and was registered for road service at any time after the repairs were made. The character of the repairs called for by the inspector’s card was what was called a “hot shot job,” and it was expected that they should be completed as early as practicable. Appellee testified that, after completing some other repairs on the engine, he undertook to tighten the packing nut with a wrench secured from another employee in the roundhouse. 'The wrench proved unsatisfactory because of the close proximity of some adjacent pipes which interfered with the use of the wrench. About that time his foreman, Motherwell, appeared, saw the situation, and directed the appellee to use his hammer and chisel in turning the nut. In obedience to that order, and because he could not use the wrench without first removing the adjacent pipe, appellee began us-1 ing the hammer and chisel. While striking the chisel with the hammer, a particle of the metal flew off, and caused the injury for which he now sues. In this appeal it is not contended that the injury did not occur at that time and in the manner stated above. The foreman, however, denied that he gave the directions to use the hammer and chisel-instead of the wrench. He testified that he was not present at any time while appellee was working on the engine, and did not know what tools he was using, or how he was doing the work.

The following special issues were submitted to a jury:

“(1) Did the defendant company fail to furnish and have reasonably accessible to Weath-erly goggles for his use in the work in which he was engaged when injured? Answer: Yes.”
In answer to questions 2 and S the jury found that such failure was negligence, and a proximate cause of the injury.
“(4) Did the foreman of the defendant company, upon the occasion and at the time in question, require plaintiff Weatherly to do with a hammer and chisel the work in which he was engaged when injured? Answer: No.”
*558 On account of the negative answer to question 4, questions 5, 6, and 7 were not answered.
“(8) Did the defendant company, or its foreman under whom Weatherly worked, require him to do the work in which he was engaged when injured without taking down the pipe, if any, around or adjacent to the packing nut, and preventing (if they did) the use of a Stillson wrench in doing that work ? Answer: Yes.
“(9) Did the defendant’s failure to have the pipes adjacent to the packing nut, and preventing (if they did) the use of a Stillson wrench in Weatherly’s work, removed before requiring him to work on said nut, if you find it did so require, render such work extrahazardous, and not reasonably safe for him while engaged therein? Answer: Yes.
“(10) Was the failure to have such pipe, if any, removed before directing plaintiff to do the work at which he was engaged, if he was so directed when injured, negligence upon the part of the defendant company or its agents under whom Weatherly worked? Answer: Yes.”

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2 S.W.2d 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-southwestern-ry-co-v-weatherly-texapp-1928.