Texas & New Orleans Railroad v. Gardner

69 S.W. 217, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 90, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 231
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 19, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 69 S.W. 217 (Texas & New Orleans Railroad v. Gardner) 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 & New Orleans Railroad v. Gardner, 69 S.W. 217, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 90, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 231 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

GILL, Associate Justice.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff, Elzy A. Gardner, through the negligence of the agents and officers of the Texas & Hew Orleans Bailroad Company and the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Bailway Company, who were joined as defendants below. The negligence complained of was the failure of the agents of defendants to warn plaintiff of the poisonous nature of certain ingredients used in a vat of boiling liquid of which, as employe of defendants, he was placed in charge, and with and about which his duties required him to work. His injuries are alleged to have been due to metallic and chemical poison taken into his system both by contact with them and the liquid containing them and by inhaling the noxious vapors arising therefrom.

Defendants answered, (1) by general denial; (2) that plaintiff knew the nature of the ingredients and character of the work and assumed the risk of injury therefrom; (3) that the injuries complained of were due to plaintiff’s own inherent weakness and disease, and knowing his physical condition was guilty of contributory negligence in exposing himself to the hardships incident to his work.

A trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff, from which defendants prosecute this writ of error.

The facts are as follows: The defendants maintained at their shops in the city of Houston a large vat called a lye tub, for the purpose of cleaning parts of engines and other machinery. This vat had a capacity of between one and two thousand gallons and its depth was over three feet. Connected with it was a machine operated by compressed air for use in lifting weights too heavy to be handled by hand. Tongs were supplied for handling smaller pieces. It was the duty of the employe in charge td keep the vat filled with a liquid designed for the purpose and by the addition from time to time of certain chemicals supplied by the defendants to keep the contents of the vat up to a certain strength in order that it might effectively dissolve and clear away the dirt, grease, and other foreign matter which accumulates upon machinery by use. This liquid was kept at 312 degrees Fahrenheit by a coil of steam pipe in the bottom of the vat. 5

The pieces cleaned in this vat were of steel, iron, or copper, and some of them contained paint, one of the ingredients of which is white lead. This paint would be removed and dissolved in the liquid when the pieces were immersed therein. The main body of the liquid was procured from hoppers filled with ashes over which water was poured, the product running into the vat in the form of ordinary lye. To increase the strength *92 of this it was necessary to use %oiler compound,” the active ingredient of which was caustic soda. This was sometimes put into the vat in lumps and sometimes in solution previously prepared by the company and kept in quantity for the purpose.

A steam jet was used to expel from the machinery any particles of dirt, grit, or paint or other foreign substance which might remain thereon after it was taken from the vat. In using this, if the piece was smooth and round the particles would be blown away from the person using it, but if the piece was hollow or irregular in form the particles, together with such quantities of the liquid as adhered, would be blown back on the hands, face, and clothing of the person using it. Vapors arose from the boiling liquid which were necessarily inhaled by the person in charge of the work. The labor was heavy and disagreeable.

On the 18th of July, 1898, plaintiff sought employment of the defendant and was placed in charge of the vat, his duties being as above described and to use the vat for the purposes for which it was designed. He was taken to the vat and an employe told to explain his duties to him, how to use the lifting apparatus, the steam jet, how to keep the liquid up to its necessary strength, and where to get the materials for the purpose. Plaintiff worked at his task for eighteen months, when he quit on account of ill health. He knew nothing of the ingredients of caustic soda or potash, its effects on grease, paint, or metals when subjected to heat and vapor, nor did he know that the chemicals alone or their products when thus combined would prove deleterious to his health.

When he first began he used his bare hands in putting the caustic soda into the tub, but he at once discovered that it burned his hands, and thereafter he found means to cover them when handling it. He also learned that the liquid made his hands sore and consumed his finger nails, and thereafter he kept his hands oiled as a protection against that effect. In using the steam jet he discovered that the particles when they struck his fact would cause a stinging sensation, but he did not know that he was incurring any danger beyond these surface burns, or that his health was in danger either from the inhalation of the vapors or by absorption of the poison from contact therewith. The evidence of plaintiff’s witnessses standing alone would have sustained a verdict that the condition of- his health was due to both absorption of metallic and chemical poisons by contact, and to inhalation of the vapors and gases arising from the heated liquid. The testimony of defendant’s witness tended to show that plaintiff was suffering with tuberculosis and that his ill health was in no way due to metallic poison. That the vapors from the vat contained no poison, and that contact with the liquid or the chemicals would result only in surface sores.

The physicians testifying in behalf of plaintiff stated that they could not say with certainty that any of the metallic poisons generated by the liquid except potash and lead had produced any deleterious effect upon plaintiff. That these two played the important part as evidenced by his symptoms. They agreed that the conditions had subjected him to the *93 influence of the other poisons also. Plaintiff’s pleadings did not specify the character of metallic poison to which his injuries were alleged to be due.

Jason A. Baker, the man who employed plaintiff and put him to work, stated that they had great difficulty in getting a man for the place. That he had put from fifteen to thirty men to work at the tub prior to plaintiff’s employment, and they would quit in a short time. Some of them became sick and at least one had to seek medical treatment. That he did not tell plaintiff of this because he needed a man for the place, and on that account did not warn him of the dangers of the position.

The evidence is sufficient to support the verdict that the plaintiff’s injuries were due to absorption of metallic and chemical poisons, principally lead and caustic soda, and that this was brought about by actual contact with the poisons.

The evidence was sufficient to authorize the trial court to submit as an issue whether the vapors contained poison which affected plaintiff by inhalation, but whether we could approve the verdict upon this ground alone is another question. In the present attitude of the ease the jury are presumed to have based their verdict upon the issue which the evidence fully sustains.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W. 217, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 90, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-new-orleans-railroad-v-gardner-texapp-1902.