Texas Employers' Ins. Ass'n v. Barron

21 S.W.2d 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 10, 1929
DocketNo. 2352. [fn*]
StatusPublished

This text of 21 S.W.2d 78 (Texas Employers' Ins. Ass'n v. Barron) 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
Texas Employers' Ins. Ass'n v. Barron, 21 S.W.2d 78 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinions

HIGGINS, J.

This suit was brought by appellant, tbe alleged insurance carrier, to set aside an award against it, made by tbe Industrial Accident Board in favor of appel-lee. Omitting averments usual in such cases, appellee based bis right of recovery upon tbe Workmen’s Compensation Act (Rev. St. 1925, arts. 8806-8309, as amended), as an employee of tbe Atlantic Oil Production Company working in Crane county, upon tbe following allegations, to wit:

“Said defendant went to work for said company, on their lease known as ‘University C’ lease, as a gauger of oil, at a daily wage of, to wit, $5.00 per day, and he continued to work for said company in this capacity and at said wage, for about one month. On or about tbe 15th day of September, 1927, said defendant’s work for said company was changed, and be was then employed and put to work by said company, as bead roustabout, or gang foreman, for tbe same employer, on tbe same lease, and occasionally on its leases B and E, in which he was thereafter continuously employed, at a uniform daily wage of six ($6.00) dollars per day, until be was injured and bad to give up bis work, on, to wit, tbe 9th or 10th day of March, 1928, as hereinafter stated.
“While be was thus engaged, be was working for bis said employer on said leases, and was in charge of a gang of men, who, like himself, were engaged in working on or about active oil and gas. producing wells, pulling therefrom and replacing therein rods and tubing used in tbe production of oil and gas; and also in cleaning out gas and oil separators, repairing oil rigs; ditching, and taking up and laying pipe lines, and other similar work on and about said leases.
“In doing such work, defendant was compelled to work, and he did work, when pulling tubing from said wells, in an atmosphere which was liable from time to time to be permeated and heavily charged with poisonous gas which was from time to time permitted to escape from said wells, and he was thus forced to and did at times inhale the air thus charged with such poisonous gases as it was so released from said wells, as hereinafter stated; whereby his eyes, ears, mouth, nose and lungs were all irritated, inflamed and poisoned, and he was seriously injured and disabled, and was finally forced to discontinue such work, as stated below.
“This defendant says that it was then and there entirely practicable, by taking proper precautions, to confine within said well, so as to prevent its escape therefrom, the gas which was permitted to escape from said wells. But said employer negligently and carelessly neglected and refused to exercise such precautions, and it negligently and carelessly permitted such gas to accidentally escape from said wells,. and to poison the atmosphere in the vicinity thereof, as above stated, to this defendant’s great damage.
“As the direct and proximate result of the negligence of said employer, in failing to take the necessary precautions to prevent the escape of the gas from said wells while this defendant and his men were doing their work in the course of their employment, such gas was permitted to accidentally escape from confinement in the wells, and was permitted to gather and settle in dangerous volume and quantities around and about said wells, and to mix and commingle with and to permeate the atmosphere in that immediate vicinity, so as to poison and render dangerous the air which said defendant and his men were forced to breathe while working there.
“On, to wit, the 9th, 10th day of March, 1928, while-this defendant was engaged in the work of pulling tubing from well No. 4, and in the course of employment on said lease O, a great and excessive amount of the poisonous gases originating in said- well, was accidentally permitted to escape from said well, and to gather in great and dangerous quantities in that immediate vicinity where this defendant was working; and he was thus forced to inhale and breathe and take into his system and into his nose, mouth, throat and lungs, large quantities of such gas as it came from said well, and of the air so heavily impregnated therewith; whereby his head and the nasal passages and sinuses thereof, and his eyes, nose, mouth, throat and lungs were then and there poisoned, irritated, inflamed and injured, that he was thereby so overcome and injured, that he was then and there forced to give up his employment, and to cease working altogether.
“This defendant avers that as the natural and proximate result of the inhalation of such gases, and the effect thereof on his system, he was rendered very susceptible to, and he has contracted and developed tuberculosis of the nose, head, throat and lungs, and that he now has such disease, particularly of his throat and lungs, from which he is now suffering and will continue permanently to suffer.
“He has also sustained serious and permanent injury to his head and his throat, from the inhalation of said gas, so that he is now an invalid and is unable to do any kind of manual labor.
“He verily believes and charges, that his injuries so sustained are permanent and incurable, and that he has been thus perma *80 nently and totally disabled from ever again laboring or earning bis own living. If defendant should be mistaken in charging that he contracted tuberculosis as a natural result of the sudden exposure to said gas, then, he charges, in the alternative, that if he had said disease prior to the time of said accident same was latent and inactive and that by said accident said disease was developed and made active and virulent and it has ever since so remained and that it has now become chronic and permanent.
“He further says that all such injuries were received in the course of his employment, and that same were the result of an accident injury compensable under the terms of the Workman’s Compensation Act of this state.”

Upon the answers returned to special issues, judgment was rendered in favor of ap-pellee. Upon the view the majority have of the case it is necessary only to consider the assignment complaining of the refusal of a peremptory charge in appellant’s favor. Ap-pellee testified:

“I worked for them about 4½ months. As to what I was doing for them, will say,- first, I was a gauger; and, second, I was head roustabout. The duties of a gauger are gauging the tanks that the wells are- flowing in, and switching out of those tanks as they fill up, and checking up with the pipe lines gauges that makes the pipe line runs and making a daily report of the daily production on the wells. I worked for them a little over one month in that work. * * *
“During thé time I was working for them as a head roustabout my duties were general lease work such as tubing up wells, pulling tubes, pulling rods, switching rods, laying pipe lines. On an average I had from three to five and Six men under me. During the time I was working there I had some experience with 'gas coming from the wells. I will explain to the jury how that gas affected any one that came into contact with it:

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.W.2d 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-employers-ins-assn-v-barron-texapp-1929.