85 S.W.2d 1079 | Tex. App. | 1935
This is a suit for compensation under the Workmen's Compensation Law of Texas. The parties will be referred to, respectively, as plaintiff and defendant, as in the trial court and in the briefs.
This suit was brought by plaintiff, W. H. Fritzmeier, against the defendant, Texas Employers' Insurance Association, to set aside an award of the Industrial Accident Board.
It was agreed on the trial that the jurisdictional matters relating to necessary proceeding before the board, etc., were stipulated by the parties, that the cause of action was regularly before the trial court, and that the injury to plaintiff, if any, occurred in Gregg county, Tex.; that defendant was the compensation insurance carrier of F. H. E. Oil Company, Inc., on the alleged date of the claimed injury; and that on said date plaintiff was an employee of F. H. E. Oil Company, Inc. It was not agreed or stipulated that at the time of the claimed injury plaintiff was in the employment, nor that the injury, if any, had to do with or originated in the work, business, trade, or profession of plaintiff's employer, nor that plaintiff was engaged in or about the furtherance of the affairs or business of his employer, at the time or place of plaintiff's alleged injury. The last-mentioned matters, as not agreed to, were controverted issues on the trial of the case.
Defendant answered by general demurrer and general denial.
The undisputed evidence on the trial showed, in substance: That plaintiff was employed as a tank builder for defendant on what was known as the "Seven Pines Job," located some nine miles northeast of Gladewater, in Gregg county; that plaintiff did not live on the lease where the work was being performed; there were no facilities out there on the lease of the Seven Pines Job for the men to stay at night; plaintiff resided at Gladewater in a "trailer-house" owned by plaintiff; that plaintiff rode from Gladewater to the lease each morning and back to Gladewater each evening with one Sam Winston, a truck driver on the same job with plaintiff, on a truck which was the property of the general construction superintendent, B. A. Rothchild; that plaintiff was not required to live at Gladewater, nor at any particular place, the only requirement of the employer being that he get to work on time; that it was up to plaintiff to make his arrangements to get to work on time; that his employer had nothing to do with where plaintiff lived; that from the time plaintiff quit work on the lease until the time he went back to work on the lease at 7 o'clock in the morning, plaintiff's employer had nothing to do with plaintiff's conduct, or what he did, or where he went; that plaintiff was not required by his employer to ride the truck; that some of the men on the job furnished their own conveyance and were not paid anything extra on that account; that plaintiff's wages were the same whether he rode the truck or furnished his own conveyance; that plaintiff was not paid by his employer for the time spent in going to or from Gladewater. The truck on which plaintiff rode, in going to and from his work, was used by the employer on the work at the lease and in hauling material from the railroad and, at times, in hauling bolts, rivets, angle clips, and scaffold clips to the lease from the railroad, and at some such times plaintiff assisted in loading some of the material on the truck, but was paid nothing by the employer for so doing.
Plaintiff and other employees who lived in Gladewater, and who rode the same truck in going to and returning from work on the lease, were instructed by one of the foremen on the work to meet at a designated place at Gladewater at a stated time, in order to take the truck and reach the work on time. Other than the above, the employees were not instructed by the defendants.
On the morning plaintiff was injured he left Gladewater about 6:15 o'clock riding on the truck, going to his work on the lease. We quote plaintiff's words in describing the accident: "I was sitting on the left hand rear side of the truck, about *1081 two feet from the back, going towards Longview on the Longview-Gladewater Highway, going at a pretty good rate of speed, and another truck going in the opposite direction coming by cut in quickly and side-swiped the truck and caught my legs, forcing them underneath the flat bed of the truck and sliding me around the corner of the bed, and whirling me around the corner of the bed, and throwing me off of the truck and hitting my back against the steel angle iron or frame on the truck. I was holding on with my right hand on the side of the truck, and Johnie Robertson was holding on to my left arm to keep me from falling off the truck."
The court overruled defendant's timely motion for an instructed verdict.
Without stating the injuries plaintiff received, we only say here that the jury found they were total and permanent, and denied a lump sum recovery. Judgment was rendered on the jury's findings in favor of the plaintiff, the court overruled defendant's original and amended motions for a new trial, and the case is regularly before this court on appeal.
The facts as to the circumstances under which the plaintiff received his injuries are undisputed. They are more fully stated in detail in the above statement than we think to give here. He was injured while riding on the truck on the highway in going from Gladewater to the lease, at which he was employed, when about three miles from Gladewater, where the truck on which he was riding collided with a truck going in an opposite direction. The point to be decided here is, was plaintiff's injury received while he was engaged in or about the furtherance of the affairs or business of his employer?
Traders' General Ins. Co. v. Ratcliff et al. (Tex.Civ.App.)
American Indemnity Company v. Dinkins (Tex.Civ.App.)
In Texas Indemnity Ins. Co. v. Clark (Tex.Civ.App.)
The cases of Wynn v. Southern Surety Co. (Tex.Civ.App.)
There are, however, cases by our courts somewhat similar in their facts to the case we have before us, and in which a more liberal construction of the statute seems to have been adopted and in which the conclusion reached is in apparent conflict with the cases above cited. We cite some of them without comment.
Lumberman's Reciprocal Ass'n v. Behnken,
Cudahy Packing Co. v. Parramore,
To us it seems that our courts are in conflict on the question under consideration. Now, it seems to us, that in our disposition to give a liberal construction of the statute, we might be too liberal and infringe upon the duty of the Legislature and add something, a condition or circumstance, to the law which the Legislature has not thought best to make a part of the law itself. We concede that if the law was, or if the employer, as a part of the daily wages of the employee, had expressly or impliedly agreed to furnish the employees a place to stay, or if the law by a liberal construction of it made it the duty of the employer to do so, or to furnish transportation to and from the plant, there could then be no question but that the employee, in going to or returning from the place of employment, would be engaged in the business or furtherance of the business of the employer, but such seems not to be the law, and we find no such express or implied agreement in the evidence, but rather that there was none.
We have concluded that the court was in error in not giving defendant's charge or motion to return a verdict in its favor. *1083
The facts seem to be fully developed. The conclusion we have reached makes it unnecessary to pass upon the other points presented. The case is reversed and judgment is here rendered for defendant.