The sole question on this appeal is whether the deceased, in the course of his employment, suffered an accidental injury that caused his death. This question was one for the jury if a statement by the deceased to his wife was admissible in evidence.
The deceased was a gauger for the Sun Oil Company. He left home about 6 o’clock A. M., November 15, 1939, riding in his car. He had been gone about thirty minutes, when he returned, his body bent over, complaining of pain in his chest and in the lower part of his stomach. In answer to a question by his wife, he told her that, while gauging a gasoline tank, he sucked some gas down his throat, and thought it had gone into his lungs, and that it was making him sick at the stomach. He continually tried to vomit until he died twenty or thirty minutes later. The testimony of his widow as to what he told her was admitted by the court over the objection of appellant.
The appellees rely upon Travellers’ Insurance Co. v. Mosley,
As to the doctrine of res gestae, the rule in Texas is “very latitudinous”, and its application must be left largely to the judicial discretion of the trial court. Pilkinton v. Gulf, C. & S. F. R.,
In International & G. N. Ry. Co. v. Anderson,
In Dallas Hotel Co. v. Fox, Tex.Civ.App.,
To the same effect, see the following: Panhandle & S. F. Railway Co. v. Huckabee, Tex.Civ.App.,
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Notes
Cf. Halleck v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., 5 Cir.,
