Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Coker

204 S.W.2d 977, 146 Tex. 190, 1947 Tex. LEXIS 132
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1947
DocketNo. A-1269
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 204 S.W.2d 977 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Coker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Coker, 204 S.W.2d 977, 146 Tex. 190, 1947 Tex. LEXIS 132 (Tex. 1947).

Opinion

Mr. Judge S medley

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Respondent Coker brought this action for damages on account of personal injuries suffered by him as an employee' of petitioner, Western Union 'Telegraph Company. As is shown by-the pleadings and the briefs, the case was tried on the theory [192]*192that petitioner had three or more employees, but was, not a subscriber under the Workmen’s Compensation Law. Petitioner therefore is, by the terms of that law, deprived in this action of the defenses of contributory negligence, assumed risk, and negligence of' a fellow employee, but it is necessary to a recovery by respondent that he prove negligence on the part of petitioner, or on the part of petitioner’s agent or servant acting in the general scope of his employment, that was a proximate cause of the injury. Article 8306, Section 1, Revised Civil Statutes of 1925.

Only one ground of negligence was submitted to the jury. In answer to special issues, the jury found that the safety of respondent in performing the work in which he was engaged when he was injured reasonably required the services of at least two men; that petitioner failed to exercise ordinary care to furnish another person to work with respondent; and that this failure was a proximate cause of resepondent’s injuries. Judgment was first rendered for $2,000.00, the amount fixed by the jury, but on motion for new trial the court required a remittitur of $750.00. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment, one of the justices dissenting. 202 S. W. (2d) 710.

Respondent is an experienced carpenter. He had worked for petitioner “off and on” for about four years. In 1943 he installed the fixtures in the building where he was injured on June 28, 1944, and he worked part of each of those two years for petitioner. His hours of work were from eight to twelve and from twelve-thirty to four-thirty.

At the time when he was injured respondent was taking down a partition wall at the back of a small vestibule about five feet wide and extending about six feet from the front door. On one side of the vestibule was a shop for repairing telegraph equipment, of which O’Neal was foreman; on the other side of the vestibule was the office of McWorth, the city foreman, by whom respondent was employed and paid. The wall that respondent was tearing down was about eight feet high- and did not reach the ceiling by about eighteen inches. Across the top of the wall was a cap or plate about five feet long made of two two by fours nailed together and fastened by sixteen penny nails. Respondent first removed the sheet rock and the framing of the partition, and then, standing on the sécond or third step of a stepladder, undertook to take down the four by four plate. Using in his right hand an iron bar weighing from five to seven [193]*193pounds and holding the plate with his left hand, he pried the plate from the top of the partition. It came loose suddenly, “jiggled to one side, got away from” him, fell and struck his ankle, breaking the skin and making a hole and a bruise where one of the nails entered.

Respondent testified that he should have had a man helping him when he was on the ladder removing the plate. Two witnesses who were not present when the accident occurred, testifying for respondent, expressed their opinions that for the safety of respondent and those who may have been nearby, another man should have been present to help respondent remove the plate.

The law imposes upon the employer the duty to exercise reasonable care in providing for an employee adequate help in the performance of work required of him. The duty is non-delegable and continuous, the rule being in principle the same as that requiring the employer to furnish his employee with safe instrumentalities and a safe place to work. Bonn v. Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co., 82 S. W. 808; Galveston, H. & S. A. Co. v. Brown, 181 S. W. 238; Jarvis v. Erwin Cotton Mills Co., 194 N. C. 687, 140 S. E. 602; 39 C. J. pp.523-525, Secs. 627-630; 35 American Jurisprudence, pp. 626-627, Sec. 197; La-batt’s Master and Servant (2d Ed.) Yol. 3, pp. 2912-2915, Sec. 1107.

The text last cited, in addition to the statement of the general rule, contains on page 2914 the following: “So far as the movements of servants may depend upon their own volition, and are not in any way affected by the control of a superior, it is clear that there can be no recovery on the theory that the number of servants was temporarily inadequate at the time and place where the injury was received, unless it is shown that such inadequacy was known, actually or constructively, to the master or his representative.” See also 35 Am. Jur., p. 626, Sec. 197.

The employer is not liable when he has provided help and injury results from the act of the employee in voluntarily proceeding to do the work without assistance. The same is true when sufficient help is nearby and available and the employee does the work alone without seeking or asking for assistance. Hines v. Ross, 230 S. W. 1066; Melton v. Texas & N. O. Ry. Co., 254 S. W. 510; Jarvis v. Erwin Cotton Mills Co., 194 N. C. 687, 140 S. E. 602; 39 C. J. p. 525, Sec. 630.

[194]*194In Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. v. Evans, 142 Texas 1, 175 S. W. (2d) 249, the employee was injured by carrying ■sacks of potatoes weighing one hundred pounds a distance of about seventy-five or eighty feet. Recovery was sought on the ground that the employer was negligent in requiring the employee to carry the potatoes without someone to assist him. It was held that the employer was not negligent and not liable, because under the facts he could not reasonably have foreseen that the employee, in doing the work without assistance, would suffer the resultant injury or injury similar in character.

One of the grounds for petitioner’s motion for peremptory instruction is that there is no evidence tending to prove that petitioner failed to use. ordinary care to provide an assistant or helper to respondent while he was dismantling the partition. No witness except respondent testified to the occurrence of the accident in which he was injured and, according to respondent’s testimony, no other person saw the accident unless it was O’Neal, the foreman of the shop, who had no connection with and no authority concerning the work that was being done.

Testifying as to the accident and what preceded it, respondent said: McWorth, the foreman’, told him what to do and went away. In removing the partition, he first knocked off the sheet rock and took down the studding. This was a job that one man could do easily. He “had had help but they put them on something else.” Bob Thompson, who had helped him, was not there at the time when he pried the plate loose. He did not testify how long he had help, what the helper did, who took him away, how long the helper had been away, or where the helper was when the accident occurred. After he was struck by the falling plate, respondent got off the ladder and asked O’Neal whether he had anything to put on his injured leg. O’Neal put mercurochrome on the wound and it was then “right at 4:30, quitting time.” Asked whether he had any help at the time when he was prying the plate loose, respondent said that he looked around and nobody was there, that the foreman was gone and Bob Thompson, who had helped him, was not there at the time.

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Bluebook (online)
204 S.W.2d 977, 146 Tex. 190, 1947 Tex. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-coker-tex-1947.