Texas & N. O. R. v. Rittimann

87 S.W.2d 745
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 1935
DocketNo. 9562.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 87 S.W.2d 745 (Texas & N. O. R. v. Rittimann) 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 & N. O. R. v. Rittimann, 87 S.W.2d 745 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

BOBBITT, Justice.

The appellant, Texas & New Orleans Railroad Company, defendant in the court below, presents this appeal from a judgment of the district court of Bexar county, Tex., awarding damages in the sum of $20,000 in favor of appellee, Walter G. Rittimann, plaintiff in the trial court, for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by appellee while in the service of appellant, and by reason of the alleged negligence of appellant.

The parties will here be designated as in the trial court.

Plaintiff is a farmer residing on his farm near the railroad station of Schertz, in Bexar county, which is on the main line of the defendant railroad company, and at which place it maintained a large elevated water tank and other facilities to supply water for use in its locomotives and for other railroad purposes. Defendant, under the terms of a written agreement, engaged plaintiff to operate its pumping plant and keep a supply of water in its said tank; defendant furnishing all tools and facilities for such purpose, the plaintiff only giving his personal service to the work. It was the duty of plaintiff, under the agreement between the parties, to keep the tank full of water; to keep the defendant’s premises, including its machinery and surroundings used by him, in a neat and orderly condition; to make such minor repairs as he was capable of making, with the understanding that he was not required to make heavy repairs beyond his capacity. All work was to be performed under the supervision and direction of the superintendant of defendant.

The defendant’s said water tank was a large wood structure of the class and the kind ordinarily used for such purposes, placed upon a heavy timber platform *747 about 17 feet high; the tank itself being about 17 feet in height. A stepladder made of wood was located to the side of the tank, its bottom end placed and secured on the ground, about 10 or 12 feet from the platform on which the tank was resting, and reaching above and against the top. of the tank about 34 feet from the ground. This ladder was fastened or braced to the top of the heavy platform on which the tank rested, by boards nailed to the side of the ladder about 17 feet from the ground and to the large timbers on top of and constituting the joists of the tank platform. It is undisputed that two such braces run from each side of the ladder, to which they were nailed, direct and parallel with each other, to the tank platform where they were nailed to either side of a heavy timber support or joist under the tank.

In order that the location of these braces be made as clear as possible, and by reason of the importance of their location in this case, we will identify these two braces as follows: The brace to the right side of the ladder will be referred to as brace A; the one parallel thereto and nailed to the left side of the ladder will be referred to as brace B. These two braces are parallel, and, as stated, are nailed to the right and left side of the ladder, respectively, and to either side of a 12 by 12 inch beam, one of the joists under, and being a part of, the platform upon which the tank rested, some 17 feet from the ground.

It is undisputed that another board or brace was nailed on top of brace B, adjoining the ladder, and running to the left of the ladder at an angle, some 6 or 7 feet, and there nailed to another heavy timber support constituting a part of the platform upon which the tank rested. This brace will be referred to as brace C. There was another board or brace nailed to the top of brace A, on the right of the ladder, and running at an angle to another and corresponding heavy beam or joist constituting a part of the tank platform. This board or brace will be referred to as board D.

From the testimony, and particularly the photographs and the graph introduced in evidence and before us, it appears that when the ladder was originally constructed this board or brace D was nailed to the top of brace A, adjoining the ladder in the same position on the right side of the ladder that board or brace C occupied to the left of the ladder. It is clear to us, however, if not undisputed by the testimony, that at the time of the accident with which we are concerned in this case, said board D was nailed to the top of brace A, some three feet back of the ladder and in toward the tank and about 18 inches from the tank. This board extended from this location a distance of about 4 feet, and was nailed to the heavy timber support under the tank to the right of the ladder. This is the board or brace which it is conceded broke with plaintiff when he walked on it, on the 20th day of October, 1931, causing the injuries to plaintiff.

We will here refer to the point, or place, upon which this board was nailed to the top of brace A as point E, and to the point, or place, to which the other end of said board was nailed on the timber support of the platform as point F. From the graph and numerous photographs introduced in evidence and exhibited to the-jury, and which are before us, and to-which the several witnesses referred and pointed out in their testimony in the presence of the jury, through such indications, and references as “from here to there,” and “from this point to that place,” without designating a particularly identified place or point on the graph or the photographs, it has been difficult to follow the testimony and get at an understanding of the true situation without carefully reading the testimony with the exhibits before us. We have, however, read all of such testimony and carefully examined each of the photographs and the graph in connection therewith, and have the location of the- board which broke and caused the fall and injuries to plaintiff clear in our own minds. If the exhibits to which the witnesses referred in their testimony had been carefully numbered or lettered, as they explained the location and position of the board and the other facts to which they referred, the work of all concerned would have been simplified and the facts more clearly understood.

From point F on one of the heavy timber supports of the platform, and running up on the outside of the tank from its bottom to the top thereof, was a structure, or gauge, painted white, with figures thereon, and within which structure was situated a marker or indicator which showed the depth of the water in the tank. In *748 other words, this indicator or marker moved up and down on the outside of the tank as the water rose and receded inside. It was such a gauge and marker as is customarily used on such tanks. It is undisputed that this indicator or marker was intended and did serve to show to the plaintiff, whose duty it was to keep the tank full of water, the depth of the water in said tank.

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87 S.W.2d 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-n-o-r-v-rittimann-texapp-1935.