Texas & Pacific Railway Company v. Ruby Nell Thomson

232 F.2d 313
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 24, 1956
Docket15743
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 232 F.2d 313 (Texas & Pacific Railway Company v. Ruby Nell Thomson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas & Pacific Railway Company v. Ruby Nell Thomson, 232 F.2d 313 (5th Cir. 1956).

Opinion

CAMERON, Circuit Judge.

This appeal involves the question whether, under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C.A. § 51 et seq., the evidence established any negligence proximately causing back injuries to a lady agent-operator sustained while she was performing her duties in handling mail from the truck to the railway mail car. Appellee Thomson sued appellant railway company, alleging that she was negligently injured December 3, 1952 while performing such duties at Monahans, Texas, basing her claim upon her assertion that the handling of the unusually large mail on that date was beyond her physical strength and that she asked her employer for help, which it refused. The Court below submitted the case to the jury on that charge of negligence, refusing the Railroad’s request for directed verdict made at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony, and repeated at the conclusion of all the testimony. The jury returned a verdict for $5,700.00 in favor of plaintiff-appellee and against defendant-appellant upon which judgment was duly entered, from which this appeal is prosecuted.

The Railroad contended before the Court below that Thomson had failed completely to sustain the charge of requested and refused assistance upon which her action was based, and argues here that the Court below committed er *314 ror in refusing to direct the jury to return a verdict in its favor. A careful review of the evidence discloses that the Railroad’s position is sound and that the Court below should have directed a verdict in its favor.

The evidence of plaintiff showed that she began working for the Railroad in 1943, being then on the extra board as telegraph operator and working only at infrequent intervals followed by a period during which she ceased working entirely. She went back to work in 1951 and was placed again on the extra board and worked at several agencies of the Railroad. She “bid in” the job at Monahans, Texas, and went regularly to work there in October, 1952, and worked until she claims to have been injured December 3rd of the same year. She knew when she claimed her right to the Monahans assignment that, although the same work at some stations on the road did not involve the handling of baggage or mail by the agent-operator, the job at Monahans did involve such handling. 1 Upon entering upon her duties at Monahans she began the usual handling of mail and had some conversation with the agent, who was her superior, about the clothes she should wear. The agent preferred that she wear female attire, but she objected mildly to that because it was hard to get onto and off of the mail trucks while attired in a “skirt and hose”; and she found it particularly awkward when men were in view. For some reason she stopped for a while participating in the handling of the mail and the duty was done entirely by a couple of laborers who worked at the station. When, about a month before the day of her injury, the agent observed that she was not performing her duties in connection with the handling of the mail, he told her that this was a part of the duty of her position and that she should continue to perform that duty. They had a further conversation at that time about the wearing of “hose and skirts”, and the agent again expressed a preference that she wear the clothes normally worn by ladies, but emphasized to her that the job came first and that she could dress as she desired or as she thought necessary for the proper performance of her duties. At no time did she intimate that she felt that the work was too strenuous for her or that she desired to have assistance in performing it.

On the morning she stated she received the injuries, she handled the mail alone as she had done on frequent other occasions and as was the usual custom. The Post Office authorities had placed on the fiat surface of the usual four-wheeled truck employed in such work something like ten to fifteen mail sacks. She pushed the truck along the asphalt platform *315 and backed it into the mail car and chocked the wheels. She then mounted the truck and “moved” the mail sacks onto the floor of the mail car. 2 Some of the bags, according to her estimate, weighed as high as fifty to seventy-five pounds each. When the truck had been completely unloaded, the mail clerk on the car began lifting the sacks of mail destined for Monahans onto the truck and appellee would “put it and stack it on my cart.” She did not testify how many sacks came off of the mail car or how much they weighed.

Before she completed this operation she found herself suddenly fatigued and, when the unloading had been completed and she had gotten down off of the truck, she experienced severe pain in her back. She did not remember whether she rolled the truck away from the train or not. She worked on about twenty or thirty minutes until her normal quitting time and then went home. A couple of days later she consulted a doctor and was subsequently carried to the Railroad hospital where she was entitled to free treatment by reason of contributions made by her each payday. She remained in the hospital until March, 1953, except for four days’ work she performed in January. She worked with fair regularity from March, 1953 until October, 1954, being careful each time to bid in a job which did not entail the handling of mail or baggage. The medical testimony disclosed that she had serious trouble in her back. The doctors for the Railroad Company attributed the trouble to congenital pathology, while plaintiff’s doctors were of the opinion that the heavy work aggravated an already existing arthritic condition of the spine.

Appellee offered no evidence at all to sustain the basic charge of her complaint 3 that she asked for and was refused assistance in handling the “unusually large quantity of mail” on the day of her injury.

The Court below submitted the case to the jury on that charge of negligence alone, using a most identical language. 4 Appellee was asked several times if she requested any additional help or asked certain named individuals to help her, and she stated categorically that she did *316 not ask any help. 5 The testimony quoted in the note represents the closest approach made by appellee to sustaining the charges on which she relied in her complaint. The agent and all of the other employees testified that they were not requested to help with the mail and tire agent further stated that at no time had he ever told appellee or anyone else that the duties must be performed without assistance.

At all events, taking appellee’s own statements and drawing therefrom all permissible inferences, there is no tendency on the part of the evidence to sustain the charge quoted above that she had, on December 3rd, requested assistanee in unloading an unusually large quantity of Christmas mail and had been refused such assistance. By basing her complaint on this allegation and by placing it before the jury as the sole charge of negligence, she recognized that, under the law, she had no case unless she could sustain .this charge of negligence. 6

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Louisiana & Arkansas Railway Co. v. Gary
780 S.W.2d 413 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 F.2d 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pacific-railway-company-v-ruby-nell-thomson-ca5-1956.