Zumwalt v. Texas Central Railroad

132 S.W. 112, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 567, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 776
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 26, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 132 S.W. 112 (Zumwalt v. Texas Central Railroad) 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
Zumwalt v. Texas Central Railroad, 132 S.W. 112, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 567, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 776 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinions

*568 CONNER, Chief Justice.

Appellant sued the appellee company to recover damages for the loss of an eye caused by the alleged negligence of Doctor S. Webb, the chief surgeon of appellee’s hospital department at Walnut Springs. The defense was that the department was conducted without profit and as a charity. After the introduction of the evidence the jury were peremptorily charged in appellee’s favor, and from the verdict and judgment in accord with such instruction this appeal has been prosecuted.

The action of the court is not defended on the theory that the evidence did not raise the issue of negligence on Doctor Webb’s part, so that there remains for our determination the single vital question of whether the court-was justified in giving the peremptory instruction to find for appellee on the ground that the evidence conclusively showed that appellee, in the undertaking of its hospital and treatment of sick and injured employes, was engaged in a charity. Appellee affirms that ■ it was, and that therefore it is liable only for negligence in the employment of the surgeon. This appellant denies.

The evidence relevant to the question is to the effect that appellant, in April, 1907, had been employed by the appellee company, and was located at Walnut Springs; that as such employe he was engaged as a boiler-maker, receiving pay at the rate of thirty-eight cents an hour for the time employed, working ten hours a day; that the wages of appellee’s employes were paid monthly, there being deducted out of each month’s wages the sum of fifty cents for medical treatment at the hospital. Appellant thus states it: “Each and every month we were paid by the company our full month’s pay, with the exception of fifty cents, which was deducted by the railroad company for medical treatment at the hospital. The money .was not turned over to us to pay into the hospital fund, but the company in the first place deducted the fifty cents from our salary or from our pay check, and for this fifty cents per month the company was to give its employes medical treatment in its hospital. Other than this fifty cents per month no further charge was to be made for medical treatment at this hospital or by the company physician.” It was otherwise shown that the appellee was a railroad company operating a line of railroad from Waco to Walnut Springs and other places; that appellant was injured and treated by Doctor Webb, who had been employed and was acting in accordance with a written contract whereby Doctor Webb agreed to act as chief surgeon of the appellee company, and as such to establish and maintain at Walnut Springs “an adequate and suitable hospital” at his own expense for the treatment of all employes of appellee who were “entitled t'o hospital privileges” as provided in the contract, and to furnish all instruments, devices, appliances, medicines and other necessaries, “for the proper treatment of all such employes, and to treat such employes who were entitled to hospital privileges under this contract', or the rules and regulations” of appellee governing in the matter. In consideration of which appellee agreed “to collect from all of its white employes, except its general officers, the sum of fifty cents per month as hospital fees,” and to deliver the same to Doctor 'Webb, as compensation for his services, etc. The contract further provided that Doctor Webb should appoint local surgeons at all important' towns on the line *569 of appellee’s railway, and that such local surgeons might be called by appellee “to treat in cases of emergency any employe entitled to hospital privileges,” and that the fees of such local surgeons for such services should be deducted by appellee from the hospital fund provided for. Appellee also agreed, as part compensation t'o all local surgeons appointed under the contract, to furnish them annual transportation over its line of road without cost to Doctor Webb. The contract provided that it should “continue in force for a term of five years” from its date, “subject, however, to be terminated by either party hereto by giving written notice of sixty days to the other party of his intention so to do.” Hr. Hamilton, appellee’s vice-president and general manager, testified that the average number of men employed by the company during the year 1906 was about seven hundred and twenty-three; for 1907, about nine hundred and eighty; that during the year 1907 there was received from the employes as hospital fees four thousand four hundred and forty-five dollars; that the money is received by the defendant company and in the course of business deposited in the First National Bank of Waco, and the payments of the pay-roll and the payments to the chief surgeon are made by checks on the First National Bank; that the deduction from the wages of the employes is sent to the chief surgeon at the same time the employes ■are paid. There was also evidence to the effect that Doctor Webb was regarded as a competent, careful physician, and that appellee was without negligence in his ■ employment.

Appellee relies, in support of the court’s action in giving the peremptory instruction, upon the case of the Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Hanway, 57 S. W., 697, by the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fourth District, and the case of the same railway company versus Scott’, by the same court, in the 18 Texas Civ. App., 321; but if these cases are subject to the construction given them by appellee, we feel constrained to differ from them. We feel no inclination to disagree with the great weight of authority to the effect that, where a railroad company or person undertakes as a pure charity to furnish medical treatment to a sick or injured person, the duty of such company or person only requires the exercise of due care in the employment of a prudent' and careful physician, and that such company or person can not be made liable beyond this for negligence on the part of the physician, and the case of Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. v. Scott, 18 Texas Civ. App., 321, may be said to fall fairly within that rule. The case of Bailway v. Hanway, above cited, however, seems more clearly to support appellee’s position, and we do not know that we should undertake to distinguish it from the case now before us, save that it does not very clearly appear from the report of the case that the railway company entered into any undertaking with its employes to treat them for the monthly deductions from their wages, as we think the evidence in the case before us tends to show. But whether in this respect the cases are distinguishable or not, it is to be noted that the Supreme Court was apparently careful not to approve the Hanway case when called upon to review it, as will appear from the report in the 94 Texas, 76, and we therefore feel less hesitation in following our own views.

*570 In the case of the Texas & Pacific Coal Co. v. Connaughten, by this court, reported in the 20 Texas Civ. App., 642, the company employed and paid physicians and undertook to treat its employes when sick or injured, deducting, as here, fifty cents per month from each employe’s wages. The employes, as here, had no interest in the fund thus raised, nor in its distribution, and it was held that the engagement of the company was not a charity, and that it was liable for the negligence of its physician.

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Bluebook (online)
132 S.W. 112, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 567, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zumwalt-v-texas-central-railroad-texapp-1909.