DocketNumber: No. 7763.
Judges: Pleasants
Filed Date: 2/26/1920
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
This is a suit by plaintiff in error, as administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, Andrew Ro-berg, to recover damages for herself and minor children resulting from the death of her said husband, which she alleges was caused by the negligence of the defendant in error.
The petition alleges that the death of Andrew Roberg was caused by the breaking of a chain which was being used by the said Roberg, an employs of defendant, in removing a wrecked car from defendant’s railroad track. The charges of negligence contained in the petition are as follows:
“(1) The chain used in lifting said car was known to the defendant, or by the use of ordinary care and diligence could have been known to the defendant, to be of insufficient strength for use as a hoisting chain for which purpose it was furnished; such fact being unknown to the deceased, and could not have been known to the deceased by the use of ordinary care, for the reason that the defendant did not furnish the means with which to make a reasonable test or inspection thereof.
“(2) Said chain was defective and out of repair and unsuitable for such work, which fact was known to the defendant, or could have been known by the use of ordinary care, and which fact "could not have been ascertained by deceased by the use of ordinary care, for the reason that the means of making a reasonable test or inspection were not furnished.
“(3) The assistant superintendent of the defendant required the work being done at the time of the accident to be performed in haste while the car being hoisted was loaded, without giving decedent reasonable time and means to know and determine what was the best and-safest way in which to, perform such work.
“(4) Defendant failed to inspect- said chain and failed to use ordinary care in the inspection thereof when the use of ordinary care in the inspection thereof with proper appliances would have revealed that said chain was defective and insufficient.
“(5) The chain furnished by defendant for hoisting purposes was old and worn and insufficient.
“(6) Defendant failed to furnish reasonable means or facilities for the inspection and testing of its hoisting chain, .the hoisting chain being in itself a dangerous instrumentality.”
Defendant answered by general demurrer and general denial, and especially pleaded that the deceased and the defendant, at the time of the injury, were engaged in interstate commerce, and that the liability of the defendant to the plaintiff was therefore to be determined under the act of Congress known as the federal Employers’ Liability Act (U. S. Comp. St. §§ 8657-8665), and in that connection the defendant alleged that the deceased was familiar with the character and kind of work he was then doing, and familiar with the many methods and appliances for raising cars; that, if the chain by which
Upon the trial in the court below the trial judge, after hearing the evidence, instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendant, and upon the return of such verdict judgment was accordingly rendered.
All of the material facts affecting the question of defendant’s liability are shown by uncontradicted testimony.
The deceased husband of plaintiff, Andrew Roberg, was killed on January 1, 1914, while engaged as the foreman of a wrecking crew of defendant company in removing a wrecked car from defendant’s railroad track at or near the town of Millican, Tex. In order to remove the car it was necessary to raise it several feet from the ground and place it upon trucks. This was done by means of a derrick and crane on and attached to a wrecking car and operated by an engine on the car. The wrecked car, which was made of steel, was loaded with cinders and brick and weighed from 110,000 to 120,000 pounds. One end of the car had been raised and placed upon the trucks and the other end was being raised by the crew under direction of Roberg, when the chain by which the car was attached to the crane broke, the car fell, and a rod attached thereto struck Roberg with such force as to cause his death in a few minutes.
The chain which was being used, and the breaking of which caused the accident, was one of the chains provided by appellant for the use of its wrecking crew and kept on the wrecking car. Chains of different sizes and strength are kept on the wrecking car, the larger and stronger chains for lifting the heavier loads and the smaller chains for the light loads. There were a number of chains, and one or two were cables kept on this wrecking car to be used in lifting loads with the derrick and crane which were larger and stronger than the one that was used. The chain that was used was a seven-eighths inch chain about 12 feet in length with a hook in the center. It' was wrapped twice around the drawhead of the wrecked car, thus making it a double chain. There is no testimony as to the length of time the chain had been in use, but it appeared to be in good condition. Roberg, who was an experienced and efficient railroad man, was the wrecking foreman, and it was his duty to instruct the men under him how to handle the chains, tools, and wrecker, and to see that the wrecker was properly stocked with chains, tools, and appliances. Moore, who was the engineer on the wrecking car at the time of the accident, testified in regard to the use of the cables and chains with which the wrecker was supplied:
“I would trust an inch cable like they are generally used, taking single inch cable — that is, not double it or anything like that — with 25 tons. I would trust a 2-inch cable with as much as that wrecker could lift — that is 100 tons. As to 2%-inch cable, of course it goes on up; you can judge for yourself. * * *
“We use these cables on our cranes; some have a hook and some have an eye — what you call an eye-splice. The way these wrecker chains are used depends on what you are lifting and what the capacity of the car and load is; we have to use judgment; that is where your judgment comes in. Prom my knowledge and experience, these wrecker chains are used for switch chains, to chain body bolsters, truck bolsters, chain up a drawhead, chain up a sand bolster to the body bolster, if it will carry it, and to switch with it, and for chaining up trucks to a car, or anything that you want to lift, you know. If I wanted to lift a car, as to whether I would put around that car one of these grabhook railway wrecker chains depends on what it was loaded with and the capacity of it. They are not furnished for these heavy loads; I will tell anybody that; they are not furnished for these heavy loads.
“I was on this crane operating the engine. I don’t know what that chain was bound around; it might have been around the deadwood, and it might have been around the coupler. It would not lift the load because the load was shifted. It lifted that end of the car all right and a part of the load, of which there was a slight load on this end, you know, the first end. I understand it is the first end you are talking about. The first end was slightly loaded, because this car had been in the wreck, and in this bump had shifted its load, brick and cinders, or whatever there was in it— brick and cinders I call it — had shifted to this other end.”
“If I was wrecking, I would not lift the other end of the load with a seven-eighths inch chain wrapped around it twice; I would not do it; I would be afraid to do it, is the reason; I would want to avoid all accidents I could; that is my practice; I would have been afraid to do it. * * * I didn’t tell Mr. Roberg, when I was 18 feet away, that that seven-eighths inch chain wrapped around that car was not a sufficient chain in size to stand that load, because I Was very busily engaged up there trying to take all signals and watch from my end of it, you see, and I couldn’t be on the ground and down there too, and in fact he didn’t tell me what kind of a hitch he was going to make; that is not in my line; after he gets his hitches made, he tells me to go ahead.’’
“We 'bad chains that were used in chaining up trucks to the body of the car. They ran fz-om about three-fourths of an inch — little fellows, just long enough to keep from having so much chain around the job. Those were thrown out because we needed them, not on this car, but we needed them on other cars; and then we would throw out our cables we use on our ear beams, we called it, and any. kind of a thing that we would be liable to want. * * * I can say from my own knowledge we had chains there larger than seven-eighths inch; they were 1% inch. I could not say what length they were. They wasn’t for coupling up trucks, I know that. We had one chain 1%. We used it for a car, you know, with a big link in each end of it, not a hook on it at all. I know that was 1% inches. We use that in chaining cars together. You see, you take out the knuckle of two cars and put a big link behind the knuckle head, and take both knuckles out and just use the chain. We had not used that chain on this; we had used it previous to this. X had used it. I- don’t know if that chain was in use at the time this accident occurred. No; it wasn’t in use; I know it wasn’t because we didn’t have place to use it. The chains and cables were all in good condition that we Were using. By good condition I mean a chain or cable that hasn’t any defect that a man can detect with the naked eye. X never paid any attention to this business of examination; what was O. K.’d to me at the point I was working, or employés of the wrecking crew, is what we used. We did not select our own chains. We used what we was told to use. Mr. Roberg was the one that selected the tools and told us what to use.”
One of the experts, witness for plaintiff, testified:
“It might be safe in a degree to use a chain to sustain stresses in excess of its proof strain, but, when the safe working load is exceeded, the danger point is being approached. There are instruments by which the maximum tensile stress of a hoisting chain may be determined. It is very simple in its application. It is practicable, judging from my own experience, to have hoisting chains tested periodically in order to determine their ultimate tensile stress. As to whether there is any particular variance between seven-eighths inch railroad wrecker chains, the proof test is constant, and is that which has been applied to the chain before it leaves the factory. There is no variation in the proof test; there is no minimum proof test; in other words, the maximum proof test is the only test applied. The maximum breaking test may vary from 41,360, as stated, to about anywhere between 46,000 and 47,000 pounds, depending upon the care the workman had exercised in making the chain. Chains which do not stand a breaking strain of 41,360 pounds would be rejected in that quality; so that 41,360 would be the minimum breaking test. The maximum safe working load should not exceed 13,300 pounds stated. It is safe under the 13,000 pounds minimum safe working load.”
We agree with the trial court that this evidence is insufficient to raise the issue of negligence on the part of defendant in failing to furnish the deceased, Roberg, with sufficient and safe appliances with which to perform the work in which he was engaged at the time he was killed. The chain the breaking of which caused the accident was unquestionably of insufficient strength for the purpose for which it was being used, but the undisputed evidence shows that it was not intended to be used in lifting heavy loads like the loaded car, and that Roberg was furnished with other chains amply sufficient for lifting the load in question, and that it was his duty to see,that the proper chain was used. There is nothing in the evidence which indicates that the chain which broke was defective in any way, or was not in perfect condition and entirely sufficient for the purpose for which it was furnished the wrecking crew by the defendant; on the contrary, the evidence shows that' it sustained the weight of the end of the car which was lifted and placed on the trucks, and this weight was greater than the maximum weight which a chain of that size was tested to sustain when it was manufactured. An experienced railroad man, such as Roberg was, should have known that this chain was too small to su'stain the weight he was attempting to lift with it. Certainly the defendant could not have anticipated, when it furnished this chain for lifting light loads and furnished other stronger chains for lifting heavy loads, that its foreman, an experienced railroad man, in charge of the wrecking crew, and whose duty it was to select a chain of sufficient strength for lifting the load, would use a small insufficient chain not furnished by defendant for lifting such load, and no negligence can be imputed to defendant in supplying the wrecker with the small chain, a necessary and safe appliance for the use for which it was furnished.
It is the duty of the master to furnish tools and appliances that are reasonably safe for any use that the servant may make of them' in performing his work which the master could reasonably foresee or anticipate. This is the full duty of the master in this regard. If the servant makes an unusual or unnecessary use of the tools and appliances furnished by the master, which the master could not have reasonably foreseen, and by reason of an extraordinary strain being thus placed upon the appliances they give way and thereby cause injury to the servant, the master is not liable for such injury.
In 26 Cyc. p. 1247, the rule is stated that:
“It is the duty of a servant to use the appliances furnished him by the master for the prosecution of his work, and whore proper appliances have been furnished him, and he is injured by reason of his failure to use them.*793 he cannot recover, if he knows or is charged with knowledge of the fact they have been furnished.”
Thompson on Negligence, vol. 4, § 4003, States the rule as follows:
“A master is not liable for injuries to a servant resulting from a selection from an adequate stock of suitable appliances of an appliance which was unsuitable for the purpose' for which he intended to use it, if such unsuitableness was the result of a defect which could not have been detected and provided against on the part of the master, or of its being too light for the use for which it was intended.”
It seems to us that this rule is obviously sound and consonant with right and justice. The courts of this state have uniformly recognized this rule. Railway Co. v. Hauer, 33 S. W. 1010; Throckmorton v. Railway Co., 14 Tex. Civ. App. 222, 39 S. W. 174; Horton & Horton v. Hartley, 170 S. W. 1046.
The doctrine is illustrated and applied in the cases of Toohey v. Equitable Gas Co., 179 Pa. 437, 36 Atl. 314; Prescott v. Ball Engine Co., 176 Pa. 469, 35 Atl. 224, 53 Am. St. Rep. 683; Amburg v. International Paper Co., 97 Me. 327, 54 Atl. 765; Fewell v. Southern Ry. Co., 105 Va. 1, 52 S. E. 689,
We think it clear that the evidence is insufficient to raise the issue of negligence on the part of the defendant in any of the other matters alleged in the petition.
The appliances furnished Roberg were entirely sufficient for raising the loaded car if he had used one of the larger and stronger chains or cables with which the wrecker was supplied, and therefore no negligence on the part of the defendant can be predicated on the fact that he was directed to raise the ear without first unloading it.
The evidence shows that there had been no Inspection of the chain in question by the defendant, but this failure of inspection could not have been the proximate cause of the accident, for the obvious reason that the undisputed evidence shows that the chain was not furnished Roberg for lifting a heavy load, and defendant could not have anticipated he would so use it. If a test or inspection had shown the chain to have been in perfect condition, as all of the evidence indicates it was, it would still have been insufficient to sustain the weight of this load. If the chain had broken while being used for the purpose for which it was intended and supplied, it might be inferred that it broke because of some latent defect which a proper inspection would have revealed and defendant might have been held negligent in failing to make a proper inspection. This was the holding in the case of Jernigan v. Houston Ice & Brewing Co., 33 Tex. Civ. App. 501, 77 S. W. 260, cited by defendant. We think the facts of that case easily distinguish it from this case.
We have considered all of the assignments of error presented in the brief of plaintiff in error, and in our opinion none of them can be sustained. It follow's that the judgment of the court below should be affirmed, and it has been so ordered. •
Affirmed.