Texas & Pacific Coal Co. v. Manning

78 S.W. 545, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 322, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 547
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 78 S.W. 545 (Texas & Pacific Coal Co. v. Manning) 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 & Pacific Coal Co. v. Manning, 78 S.W. 545, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 322, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 547 (Tex. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

CONNER, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment for the sum of $7750 in appellee’s favor for injuries received while operating one of appellant’s brick machines at Thurber, Texas. The petition upon which the trial proceeded, so far as necessary to set out, and omitting formal parts, is as follows: “That plaintiff is a minor child of the age o'f, to wit, 11 years. That on the 29th day of August, 1902, plaintiff was in the service of defendants at Thurber, Texas, defendants being then and there engaged - in the manufacture of pressed bricks, and that' plaintiff’s duties "in said service of defendants was to brush off bricks with a brush after they had been pressed in a machine used by the defendant for that purpose. That said machine was complicated and difficult to work, and that plaintiff, on account of his extreme youth and inexperience, was unable to understand or know how to operate same and was physically unable to operate same. That the agent and servant of defendants whose duty it was to operate said brick pressing machine and who had charge and control of plaintiff while so in defendants’ service, ordered plaintiff to run and operate said brick presssing machine, and that plaintiff, while undertaking to do so under the instructions of and under the directions of defendants’ said servant, and while using such care and caution for his own safety as he was capable of using, got his left hand caught in said machine, and that thereby *323 three of his fingers, to wit, the first, second and fourth fingers of same, were crushed and mutilated and the leaders of same were broken and drawn out of said hand up into his arm above his wrist. That said machine was extremely dangerous for him to use and operate on account of his said youth and inexperience and lack of physical capacity to use and operate same, but that plaintiff himself, on account of his youth and inexperience, was not capable of understanding or appreciating or knowing the dangers to him, incident to the attempted use and operation of said machine by him, but that the defendants and defendants’ servant who ordered plaintiff to use said machine, did know that plaintiff was too young and small and weak and inexperienced to use such a dangerous and complicated machine, and that it was gross negligence in the defendants and in said agent and servant of defendants, who ■directed plaintiff to use and operate said machine, to so have plaintiff to use and operate same. Plaintiff further alleges that the Said agent and servant of defendants who directed him to use and operate said machine negligently failed to warn plaintiff of the dangers incident to the use of said machine, and negligently failed to instruct him as to the dangerous nature thereof.”

The evidence relied upon as supporting the asserted liability of appellant is thus stated in the brief of appellee:

“Appellee testified that when he was hurt Less Kyle, who was machine man, went to get a drink, and told him to off-bear (brick) while he was gone. That he took orders from Less Kyle. That Kyle had been controlling, or in charge of, the machine about a week at that time. That he was hurt about 9 o’clock in the morning, and that before he was hurt he had been brushing brick. That he quit work brushing brick and went to off-bearing brick because his boss told him to, and that boss was Less Kyle, and that he was doing his (Kyle’s) work at the time he was hurt. At the time he was hurt he weighed 60 or 65 pounds. That he never had any experience about machinery or its dangers; never did think whether the brick machine was dangerous or not. Sever thought nothing about danger. That Kyle nor no one else ever warned or instructed him about the danger of taking brick out of the machine. T worked under Less Kyle a week; before him, Austin Cody. Mr. Kyle had been my boss for about three weeks; the other man about a month. I was working for the company when Kyle took Cody’s place; I had worked under Cody ever since I went back to brushing brick, except the time I worked under Kyle.’
“He had been brushing brick about two months before he was hurt. His mother testified that she had hired him to defendant to brush brick. Did not know that he had been put to off-bearing until after he was hurt. Eobert McErwin testified that he had worked for the Texas and Pacific Coal Company, in the brick yard at Thurber, twice—seven months the first time,—quitting in January, 1903; trucking part of the time, and off-bearing part of the time. That Kyle run the machine, and off-bore the brick made by it. That he was in charge of the men *324 there working under him. If a man came there wanting a job and he needed the man, he put him on. There were two off-bearers, two brush boys, and a number of truckers, required to run the machine, and Less Kyle was the machine man at the time appellee was injured. Less Kyle was not used by appellant as a witness, but was put to work at Thurber, wheeling brick, by Marchman, for appellant, on the Monday morning before the trial. Marchman testified for appellant (he being its only witness) : That he was general superintendent of the Green-Hunter Brick Company at the time appellee was injured, and that appellant (appelleé) was in the service of said company. Here is a sample of his evidence on cross-examination on the question as to who directed appellee about his work, and as to Kyle’s power: Q. Who directed this boy about his work while he was working around that machine; didn’t Less Kyle do it ? A. Mr. Kyle had no authority whatever to direct any one. Q. I didn’t ask you what authority; I asked you who directed him. A. I don’t know who directed him except myself. Q. Suppose you wasn’t there? A. That was my business to be there. Q. But suppose you wasn’t there, who then directed this little boy about what he was to do when you wasn’t there? A. I have an assistant head engineer. Q. Where does he work? A. He works at the Green & Hunter Brick Co., head engineer of the yard; he works all over the yards. I was in the yard, but not at the machine when the plaintiff was hurt. I don’t know where my assistant was at the time. Q. Suppose you and he (that is your assistant) were both away; now, when you and your assistant didn’t happen to be there at the machine, who told this boy what to do? A. Who told him what to do? Q. ■ Yes. A. Might have been a heap of people that told him what to do, as far as I know. Q. Who told him what to do, who was the man that was there to direct this little boy, and the other boys, working there brushing brick, when the machine was running, and you were not there, and your assistant was not there ? A. Why, didn’t need any director. He was familiar with his job. Q. Who was the man that was there to direct this little boy and these other boys that worked there in brushing these bricks when this machine was running and you was not there nor when your assistant was not there? A. Kyle was machine man. There was a second off-bearer, Kyle was the man that oiled the machine. Q. That meant the head man, didn’t it ? A. It meant just like I have explained it to you. Q. If you or your assistant was not there, didn’t Kyle, the machine man, have charge of the machine ? A. He didn’t have charge of it any more in my absence than he did when I was present. The machine run as long as the engine would; if it didn’t have any dirt it wouldn’t make any brick; it would run just the same.”

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.W. 545, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 322, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pacific-coal-co-v-manning-texapp-1904.