Skelly Oil Co. v. Amacker

PER CURIAM.

Elmer O’Neal Amacker, the deceased, a roustabout for many years in the oil fields of Texas, was in the general employ of Gibbins & Heasley, Inc., which was engaged in the business of furnishing services to oil producers, such as the laying of pipe, digging of pits, and the cleaning of oil tanks. For additional facts, see 132 F.2d 431, since this is the second appearance of the case in this court.

After reversal on the first appeal, further pleadings were filed by both parties. These pleadings were lengthy, indefinite, inconsistent, and perplexing. The plaintiffs below had claimed in the first trial that the deceased was the employee of Gibbins & Heasley, Inc., an independent contractor, and an invitee on the premises of appellant at the time of his injury. The appellant, defendant below, proceeding on the theory that the deceased was an invitee, had claimed that the duty to warn and to exercise ordinary care was on the independent contractor.

In the pleadings filed after the case had been remanded by this court, the plaintiffs asserted that the Skelly Oil Company had supervision and control of the deceased, notwithstanding its contention that deceased was merely an invitee. Also, while in one part of its pleadings the appellant admitted that the deceased was the employee of an independent contractor and was an inviteee, in another place it categorically denied that he was an invitee. The defendant filed a fifth plea, alleging that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover against it because it was a subscriber to the Workmen’s Compensation Law of Texas, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St.Tex. art. 8306 et seq., at the time of the accident. In its sixth defense appellant asserted that the appellees had already received damages from the compensation carrier of Gibbins & Heasley, Inc., which it pleaded in bar of any further recovery and, in the alternative, it claimed credit for the same on any amount that might be recovered against it.

During the second trial the appellant offered evidence to show that it was a subscriber under said Compensation Law and contended that this court, in its prior opinion, had held that the deceased was under the supervision and control of the appellant; that the evidence for the plaintiffs in the case showed that the defendant had full supervision and control of the deceased; and that under the borrowed-servant rule the deceased was the special employee of the defendant; in which event, it alleged that the sole and exclusive right of recovery was under said Compensation Law. Objections were interposed by the plaintiffs below to this testimony, and much argument was had on the point.

The trial court raised the question that the defendant had not interposed such defense. There was further argument, but the final result was that the court admitted the evidence. The court evidently took the view that the question of whether or not the deceased was a special employee of the defendant on the occasion in question was an issue in the case; otherwise the evidence would have been irrelvant. That the court considered this as one of the issues upon which the case was tried is further indicated by the fact that some days after the verdict it permitted the defendant to file its eighth defense, alleging that the deceased was its special employee, working under its supervision and control in cleaning the tank.

We must assume that when the lower court permitted the filing of the eighth defense after verdict it did so in recognition of the fact that the subject matter thereof was one of the issues in the trial, either raised by the fifth defense or by reason of categorical denials in other pleadings. If neither of these considerations had been present, the lower court probably would have denied the defendant the right to file this defense after verdict. We think the case was tried by the parties as if such an issue had been presented by the pleadings. Therefore, the amendment was properly allowed under rule 15(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c.

In these circumstances the lower court erred in peremptorily charging the jury that the deceased was an invitee upon the premises of appellant. If the deceased were a special employee of the defendant, he was not merely an ■ invitee, and the plaintiff’s exclusive remedy was under the workmen’s compensation statute.

*23The court also erred in refusing to give defendant’s special instruction No. 1, to the effect that if the deceased were the special employee of the defendant in cleaning out the tank, and in such work was under the supervision and control of the defendant, the verdict should be for the defendant. There was substantial evidence to the effect that the deceased was doing work for the defendant, and that the defendant not only had the right to supervise and control him in his work, but actually exercised that right. This presented an issue that should have been submitted to the jury, and the failure of the court so to submit the same was reversible error.

Upon another trial, in order to avoid the confusion resulting from the pleadings in their present state, new pleadings throughout should be filed by both sides. The judgment appealed from is reversed; and the cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.