Gulf, West Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Wittnebert

108 S.W. 150 | Tex. | 1908

For many years prior to June, 1903, H. Runge Co. were engaged in running a cotton gin at Cuero, Texas, and, at the time of the injury to Wittnebert, they used Beaumont crude oil for fuel. About June, 1903, Runge Co. ordered a tank of Beaumont oil from McManus, Houck Co., of Beaumont, which was loaded into a tank car that belonged to the Texas New Orleans Railroad Company and was by the latter company and an intermediate carrier transported to Victoria and there delivered to the Gulf, West Texas Pacific Railway Company by which it was hauled to Cuero, Texas, its destination; and, on the 12th day of June, 1903, for the purpose of being unloaded, the car was placed upon a side track opposite to a pipe which connected with the oil reservoir of H. Runge Co. Wittnebert had charge of the gin of Runge Co., and with an assistant undertook to unload the oil tank. The method of unloading the tank was to connect a piece of hose with the pipe that was connected with the reservoir, then to fasten the hose upon the end of an escape pipe which extended beneath the bottom of the tank by which the oil would pass through the hose into the pipe leading to the reservoir. It was necessary before connecting the hose with the pipe to remove the tap from the end of the escape pipe through which the oil should pass. Wittnebert and his assistant went under the car and Wittnebert removed the tap, whereupon the oil flowed down from the tank upon him inflicting the injury for which this suit was brought. In the construction of the tank there was a valve which, when properly set, closed the upper end of the escape pipe and would prevent the oil from flowing through the escape pipe. A round iron rod connected with the valve and the other end extended into the dome and the proper method of unloading was, after removing the tap and attaching the hose, to go upon top of the tank and raise the valve by means of a monkey-wrench. When this car was placed upon the track the valve was not set, and when the tap was removed the oil flowed out upon Wittnebert. If the valve had been set as it should have been, this would not have happened. Upon top of the tank was a dome which, when delivered to plaintiff in error, was covered by a cap screwed down upon it. The valve could be raised by a rod which passed up through the tank and into the dome. No one could tell whether the valve was set or not without going upon the car, removing the cap of the dome and ascertaining the fact from the position of the rod.

When the car was delivered to the plaintiff in error at Victoria it was inspected by the inspector of the plaintiff in error at that place, who, however, did not go upon the top of the tank, nor remove the cap to ascertain whether or not the valve was set. The inspector could have ascertained the fact by removing the cap and examining the rod. Wittnebert had unloaded six or seven oil tank cars at the same place before this, all of which had the valves set when they were placed upon the side track at the point for unloading, and *373 he had never opened the valve before removing the tap. Wittnebert knew that if the valve was not set and the tap should be removed the oil would flow out upon him, and if he had known that the valve was not set he would not have removed the tap. He could have ascertained the condition of the valve by looking into the dome. The injury inflicted upon the defendant in error was sufficient to justify the amount of damages recovered in the trial court.

The only question presented to this court is, was it the duty of the Gulf, West Texas Pacific Railway Company to see that the valve was set and the tank in a safe condition to be unloaded when delivered to the consignee.

The judgment in this case has no support except upon the failure of the railway company to examine into the manner in which the car was loaded to ascertain whether the safety valve had been set so as to make it safe for any person who might unload the car when delivered to the consignee. It was the duty of the railway company upon receiving the tank car to make a reasonable inspection of its condition with reference to its fitness for transportation. But we have been unable to find any authority which goes to the extent of holding that it was the duty of the railway company, under such facts, to inspect the manner of loading the car so as to ascertain whether the freight was so arranged as to be safe to persons who might be called upon to remove it from the car. The Honorable Court of Civil Appeals cites Sykes v. St. Louis S.F. Ry. Co., 77 S.W. Rep., 723, and adopts its reasoning as applicable to the facts of this case. In that case a car had been loaded at Kansas City with odd car wheels consigned to the St. Louis Car Wheel Company at St. Louis. The car was carried by the Kansas City, Fort Scott Memphis Railway Co., to its connection with the St. Louis San Francisco R.R. Co., and the latter received and hauled the car to a local station in the city of St. Louis where it was delivered to the Missouri Pacific Railway Co., by which the car was carried to the premises of and delivered to the consignee. Sykes, an employe of the Car Wheel Company, entered the car for the purpose of removing the old car wheels when his foot and leg passed through a hole in the floor whereby he received his injury. There were a number of holes in the floor of that car, with hay and other things thrown over them. Sykes sued the St. Louis S.F.R.R. Co., the intermediate carrier. The Supreme Court of Missouri held that the intermediate carrier was not liable, but in delivering the opinion said that the Missouri Pacific Railroad Co., which delivered the car to the consignee, would be liable under such circumstances. This was pure dicta, the question was not before the court, the Missouri Pacific Railroad Co. was not a party to the suit. However, that case is distinguishable from this case in this, that the injury in that case occurred through a defect in the car itself, while in this there was no defect in the car, but in the loading of it. The duty of the two carriers depended upon entirely different facts, therefore, if the reasoning of that court be sound it is not applicable to the question now presented to this court. *374

We have found no dissent from the general rule that when the consignor loads freight upon a car or packs articles for shipment the carrier which receives the car as loaded, or the package as prepared, is not liable for damages which arise from the defect in the loading or the packing. Hutchison on Carriers, sec. 333; Texas P. Ry. Co. v. Klepper, 24 S.W. Rep., 567; Mexican Cent. Ry. Co. v. Shean, 18 S.W. Rep., 151; Ross v. Troy Boston Ry. Co., 49 Vt. 364, 24 Am. Rep., 144; Miltimore v. Chicago N.W. Ry. Co., 37 Wis. 190; Western Ry. Co. v. Harwell, 97 Ala. 350; Klauber v. American Express Co., 21 Wis. 21; McCarthy v. L. N. Ry. Co., 102 Ala. 193, 48 Am. St. Rep., 29; Cohn v. Platt, 95 N Y Supp., 535; Texas Cent. Ry. Co. v. Oloughlin, 84 S.W. Rep., 1104.

In Railway Co. v. Klepper, the Court of Civil Appeals for the Second District held that where horses were placed in a car by the owner for shipment over a railroad the railroad company was not liable for damages which occurred to the horses by their being overcrowded in the car, and this conclusion was placed upon the ground that the railroad company was not responsible for the act of the shipper in improperly loading his own freight, but might haul the car as loaded.

In the case of Mexican Central Ry. Co. v. Sheans, the Commission of Appeals, by Judge Garret, rendered an opinion which was approved by the Supreme Court in which it was held, although expressed in a very few words, that where a loaded car was by one railroad delivered to another it did not devolve upon the railroad receiving the loaded car to cause the loading to be inspected, adjusted or corrected. It is said that the duty to furnish safe appliances and machinery, including cars, does not extend so far.

A lot of mules were shipped upon a railroad which delivered the car loaded to the Western Railroad Company, which delivered the stock to the consignee. Upon delivery it was found that some of them had been injured by spikes or long nails driven on the inside of the car. It was held that the last company was not liable for the damages and the court said: "Such transfers and the inspection to be made during their occurrence, must need be made according to some order and system adopted by the railroad company, and by persons appointed for that duty. Attention must be given to all cars coming into their custody, and all other duties reasonably imposed upon the inspector must be performed. There was nothing to indicate to the inspector the existence of the nails or spikes inside the car. In view of these facts the simple question is was it the duty of the inspector to remove the mules and examine the car on the inside for dangerous projections? We are clearly of the opinion that it was not." (Western Ry. Co. v. Harwell, cited above.) That case is strongly in point; the defect in the loading of the tank, that is, the failure to set the valve could not be seen from the outside, but the dome must have been opened and looked into in order to ascertain that fact.

In Miltimore v. Chicago N.W. Ry. Co., the shipper selected an open car for the shipment of a wagon and loaded it upon a car without in any way confining it. While the train was in motion a high *375 wind blew the wagon from the car and it was damaged. The shipper sought to hold the railroad company liable for the injury to the wagon, but the Supreme Court of Wisconsin held that the shipper having chosen his car and having himself loaded the wagon upon the car could not recover for damages resulting from the defective manner in which the wagon was secured.

In the case of Texas Central Ry. Co. v. Oloughlin, decided by the Court of Civil Appeals for the Second District, the railroad company received beef cattle for shipment to St. Louis, limiting its liability to its own line, and the shipment upon that line terminated at Cisco where the car was delivered to the Texas Pacific Railroad Company which delivered it to the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railroad Company at Fort Worth. The Texas Central Railroad Company bedded the car but failed to make the bedding sufficient to protect the cattle from injury. The Texas Central delivered the car at Cisco within a few hours after receiving it and the cattle were not seriously damaged up to that time, but the shipment was continued in the same car to Muskogee, Indian Territory, without removing the cattle from the car or renewing the bedding. The principal damage done to the cattle in the shipment occurred after the car left the Central Railroad and that Company being sued for damages defended upon the ground that its liability was limited to its own road, but the court held that as it had made the bedding and improperly loaded the cattle in a car which was to continue as loaded after it was delivered to the succeeding carrier, its liability continued and the next carrier which received it did not become liable for the damages arising from the improper bedding furnished by the first carrier, because it transported the cattle as loaded when delivered to it. This court refused an application for writ of error in that case.

The authorities cited and from which we have made the quotations above establish the proposition that it is not the duty of a railroad company, which receives from the owner or from another railroad company a loaded car, to make an inspection of the manner of the loading when the defect can not be discovered by an external examination. If, in this case, the oil had been lost by the failure to set the valve and Runge Co. had sued the plaintiff in error for the value of the oil, no recovery could have been had, because no duty of inspection existed, therefore, no negligence would be shown by the facts.

The railroad company in the capacity of common carrier not being liable for property lost under like circumstances, how can it be that a railroad company with regard to the same freight would be under obligation to make an inspection in order to protect persons in the employ of the consignee when unloading the car? The only connection that the railroad company had with the unloading of the car was to place it in a proper position to be unloaded, and in doing so it would have been liable for any injury which might have occurred through negligence on its part in performing that duty. But it was in no sense bound to see that the contents of the tank were in proper condition for unloading. In order to make the *376 inspection claimed, the inspector at Victoria would have been required to go upon the top of the oil tank, unscrew the cap from the dome and test the valve to ascertain whether it was properly set. As we have seen, no such duty of inspection rested upon the railroad company with regard to loaded cars, received from another road, either to secure the freight or to protect its own servants while operating the train. We have found no precedent for holding that the railroad company owed such duty to the consignee, nor do we know of any rule of law that would support such a conclusion.

If the man who assisted Wittnebert had received the injury and had sued Runge Co., it would present a more serious question whether Wittnebert's failure to inspect and adjust the valve would not be such negligence as would make Runge Co. liable. There are sounder reasons for holding that Runge Co. were charged with that duty to their employes than for placing it on the plaintiff in error.

We are of the opinion that Wittnebert had no cause of action against the railroad company in this case upon the facts as detailed, and, as his own testimony shows that he could make no better case upon another trial, it is useless to remand the case to the District Court. It is therefore ordered that the judgments of the Court of Civil Appeals and the District Court be reversed and that judgment be here rendered that the defendant in error take nothing by his suit and pay all costs of all of the courts.

Reversed and rendered.