Texarkana & Fort Smith Railway Co. v. Brandon

126 S.W. 703, 59 Tex. Civ. App. 451, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 400
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 3, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 126 S.W. 703 (Texarkana & Fort Smith Railway Co. v. Brandon) 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
Texarkana & Fort Smith Railway Co. v. Brandon, 126 S.W. 703, 59 Tex. Civ. App. 451, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 400 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

WILLSON, Chief Justice.

On a former appeal of this case a judgment in favor of the railway company was reversed because the trial court had erred in peremptorily instructing the jury to return the verdict on which it was based (113 S. W., 968). This appeal is from a judgment against the railway company for the sum of $1,500.

Among other allegations, appellee’s petition contained the following:

“3. That on about the said 5th day of August, 1906, plaintiff ivas in the employ of the defendant as a local cinder loader; that is, was engaged in loading cinders on cars in and about the yards of the defendant in the city of Texarkana, Texas, his said employment being that of an ordinary laborer. That one Ed Gilroy was the foreman of this plaintiff, under whose direction and control the plaintiff was then and there working.

“4. That on about the said 5 th day of August, while the plaintiff was so employed by the defendant, and working under the control and direction of the said Ed Gilroy, he, the said Ed Gilroy, directed and required plaintiff to engage in other grade and class and kind of employment,* to wit, washing boilers of locomotives placed over a pit in defendant’s said roundhouse, and the said Ed Gilroy, as vice-principal of the defendant, directed and required plaintiff to remove a plug from the bottom of a locomotive engine boiler then standing upon defendant’s tracks over said pit in said roundhouse; that acting under the directions and requirements of the said Gilroy plaintiff, not knowing the danger incident thereto, went under said locomotive engine and removed said plug from the said boiler1, whereupon a large amount of hot water and steam was suddenly and without warning discharged from the said boiler on and upon the person of the plaintiff, scalding him upon his feet; legs, side, back, groins, arms, hands, and, in fact, almost his entire body, and inflicting upon him divers .and sundry burns, scalds and injuries. That the said engine and boiler was defective, in that it had no blowoff cock by means of which the hot water and steam could be released and discharged from said boiler by means of the removal of the said plug without the person removing the same going into said pit and under said boiler; that *454 to go under said engine and remove said plug was dangerous, but that such danger was wholly unlmown to the plaintiff, and defendant’s said vice-principal, Ed Gilroy, well knew that the plaintiff did not know the danger thereof, and the said Ed Gilroy did then and there, fully understanding and knowing the danger incident to the going into said pit and removing said plug, and without warning to plaintiff, as aforesaid, he furnished plaintiff with a short wrench, and directed him to go into said pit and remove said plug.

“5. That said work of removing said plug from said boiler was skilled labor, and, in order to safely do same, it required a man skilled in such work, and one with knowledge of the construction of said boiler, and one with knowledge of how to remove said plug without permitting the water and steam in said boiler to be discharged on and upon him, which was unknown to plaintiff, hut was well known to the defendant. The plaintiff is not, and was not, skilled in such work, and possessed no knowledge of the construction of said boiler, and possessed no knowledge of how to safely remove said plug, and how to avoid being scalded by the hot water and steam which would escape from said boiler upon the removal of said plug, all of which was well known to the said Ed Gilroy at the time he directed and required the plaintiff to go under said boiler and remove said plug. The plaintiff had no knowledge that said engine was defective, in that it had no blowoff cock by means of which .the steam and hot water could be released and discharged from said boiler without going under • said engine; that the defendant well knew that said engine was defective because it had no such blowoff cock, and failed and neglected to inform plaintiff thereof.

“6. The defendant was negligent in causing the injuries herein-before mentioned to be inflicted upon this plaintiff, in the following respects and in the following manner: First. In failing to have said engine equipped with a blowoff cock, so that steam and hot water might have been released and discharged from said boiler without entering said pit and going under said boiler and removing said plug with a wrench. Second. In requiring and directing plaintiff to go under said boiler and remove said plug, defendant knowing the danger incident thereto, and knowing of plaintiff’s want of knowledge of such danger, and in failing to advise plaintiff of the danger, and failing to advise plaintiff of the increased danger by reason of the absence of a blowoff cock,. and in failing to direct him how to safely do such work. Third. In requiring plaintiff to go under said boiler and remove said plug, knowing that it required a skilled person to safely do so, and knowing plaintiff to be unskilled, and knowing that the plaintiff did not know it required a skilled person to safely do the work, and knowing that the plaintiff was unacquainted with the construction of said boiler, and knowing plaintiff’s want of knowledge of how to safely remove said plug, and knowing that the plaintiff was not aware of the danger incident to unskilled persons attempting to remove said plug.”

The charge of the court, in part, was as follows:

“2d paragraph. If you believe from the. evidence that defendant, by Gilroy, ordered plaintiff to help- wash out one of its boilers, sta *455 tioned over its pit in its roundhouse, and that Gilroy ordered him to get in said pit and loosen one of the plugs in said boiler, and that this was work outside of his employment, and which he had not contracted to do in his employment, and that in pursuance of such order he got in the pit and loosened said plug, and while so engaged, and while in the pit, the plug blew out, or was forced out, and hot water rushed and scalded him, and that this was dangerous work when done by an inexperienced person, and that defendant did not warn plaintiff of the particular danger incident to doing said work and how to do it with safety to himself, and that plaintiff was inexperienced in said work and was ignorant of the danger incident to doing it, and that the danger, if any, in doing the work was not obvious to a person of ordinary intelligence, and that such failure on the part of defendant to warn plaintiff caused him to be injured while standing in the pit, loosening said plug in said boiler, then you will find for plaintiff. However, in this connection I charge you that, if you believe from the evidence that plaintiff knew of the danger of getting in the pit and remaining there while loosening the plug in said engine, or if you believe from all the evidence in this case that the danger was obvious and apparent to any person of ordinary intelligence; or if you believe from the evidence that plaintiff was warned of the particular danger incident to getting in the pit and loosening said plug, and remaining there, and how to do this work in order to avoid injury to himself, then you will find for defendant.

“3d paragraph.

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Bluebook (online)
126 S.W. 703, 59 Tex. Civ. App. 451, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texarkana-fort-smith-railway-co-v-brandon-texapp-1910.