94 S.W.2d 1201 | Tex. App. | 1936
On May 8, 1934, T. G. Wallace secured employment as a common laborer with the Phillips Petroleum Company at its Judkins Gasoline Plant in Ector county, Tex. The Phillips Petroleum Company had a bunkhouse for the use of some of its men for sleeping quarters. There was no charge made for the use of the bunkhouse, and the men were not required to sleep there. In the early afternoon of July 20, 1934, while Wallace and two of his fellow employees were in it, the bunkhouse caught fire and Wallace was burned so badly that he died shortly thereafter at a hospital in Odessa, Tex. Immediately preceding the fire he was seen in the bathroom of the bunkhouse washing some work clothes.
Notice of the accident was duly given to the Industrial Accident Board of Texas, naming appellee as the insurer of the Phillips Petroleum Company, by Callie Wallace and Dorothy Frances Wallace, wife and infant daughter of T. G. Wallace. From an award in favor of appellants by the Industrial Accident Board, appellee appealed to the district court of Ector county. Appellants in due time answered the suit there filed and by cross-action sought compensation for the death of *1202 their husband and father for a period of 360 weeks. At the conclusion of the evidence, the court at the request of appellee instructed a verdict in its favor, and the appeal resulted.
If Wallace, at the time he received the burns which caused his death, was not engaged in the work of his employer, then his widow and daughter would have no cause of action against appellee.
We have examined the authorities cited by both parties, and feel that our own decision in Associated Employers' Reciprocal v. Simmons et ux.,
The Shook Case is clearly distinguishable, we think, at least in one very material particular. The employee there was admittedly on duty 24 hours per day, and was required to reside on the premises, while here Wallace's working day had expired and he was free to go where he pleased.
In the Lawrence Case the employee was not only required to reside on the premises of the employer, but there was evidence tending strongly to show, as said by the court, that either Lawrence or his wife had arisen to begin the day's duties and struck a match which caused the explosion resulting in their deaths.
The Simmons Case, supra, is in one particular even stronger than the case at bar. In that case the employees were subject to call at any time, day or night, by their employer, and their duties were then to do whatever their employer told them to do.
As it appears from the record here, Wallace had certain specific hours to work; was not subject to call at other times; and was as free to come and go as he would have been had he been living in his own home entirely separate and apart from his employer's premises.
Under such facts, the court properly instructed a verdict for appellee.
The judgment is affirmed.