Appellee Steele sued to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received by him through the negligence of appellant. Besides a general denial the appellant pleaded contributory negligence and assumed risk. A jury trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of appellee for the sum of five thousand dollars, and appellant has appealed.
The material facts as shown by the evidence are as follows: On July 21, 1906, appellee was in the employ of appellant and engaged as night fireman at its creosote plant, situated southeast of Greenville, in Hunt County, Texas. It was his duty on each Saturday night, after the plant had shut down, to open the manheads of the boilers used in the operation of the plant, so that they might cool off preparatory to having them cleaned out. The boilers were three in number and lay longitudinally "side by side and were encased in brick masonry. The manheads were sheets or pieces of iron ¿bout 18 inches long and about 16 inches wide, and there was one of them in each end of said boilers; the ones in front being situated at the bottom of the boilers and those in the rear in the top of the boilers, about 12 or fourteen feet from the ground or floor. There were two crews, a day and night crew, engaged in the operation of the tie or creosote plant. Appellee worked under the day fireman, Bob Johnson, and was subject to his direction and control. In removing the manheads in the rear end of the boilers it
Opinion.—The first assignment of error complains of the court’s action in overruling appellant’s challenge of the juror, Jesse, for cause. The bill of exception shows that this juror was one of a panel of twenty-four, from which the jury trying the case was selected, and that he had served as a juror for seven days in the District Courts of Hunt County during the preceding six months, four days in the District Court of the Sixty-second Judicial District at its February term, 1907, and three days in the District Court of the Eighth Judicial District, during its March term, 1907. The juror was challenged on the ground that having served as a juror in the District Courts of Hunt County for six days during the preceding six months he was disqualified to serve in this cause. The trial court held'the juror was qualified and overruled appellant’s challenge, whereupon appellant challenged the juror peremptorily. The contention of the appellee is, that inasmuch as the juror had served in different District Courts and had not served for six consecutive days in either or both, he was not disqualified. We do not find it necessary to decide whether the court’s ruling upon the question was correct or not. The bill of exceptions does not show that appellant suffered any injury by this action of the court, and, if it erred in not sustaining the challenge, the error is harmless. It appears from the record that the appellant exhausted the six peremptory challenges allowed it by law, but it does not appear that either of the jurors who served in the trial of the case was obnoxious to appellant, or that it would have challenged either of them, had it not been forced to exhaust a challenge on the objectionable juror, Jesse. Snow v. Starr, 75 Texas, 411; Houston & T. C. Ry. v. Terrell, 69 Texas, 650; Wolf v. Perryman, 82 Texas, 112; Paris Groc. Co. v. Burks, 17 Texas Ct. Rep., 892. The case is unlike San Antonio & A. P. Ry. v. Lester, 99 Texas, 215. In that case it was shown that, because of the court’s action in disallowing the challenge of the railway company, it was compelled to submit its case to jurors who did not possess the qualifications required by law and who were objectionable to it, and the Supreme Court held, in effect, that injury was apparent and reversed the case. That case does not, as we understand it, go to the extent of holding that the mere denial of the right to challenge a disqualified juror entitles the complaining party to a new trial. For such holding, it seems, would be in conflict with the cases of Snow v. Starr, Houston & T. C. Ry. v. Terrell, and Wolf v. Perryman, supra. It must appear, in addition to such denial, as we understand the law, that some injury was sustained in consequence of the ruling.
Appellant’s second assignment complains of the admission, over its objection, of-certain testimony. It appears that after the plaintiff had testified that his only light, on the night of the accident was a lantern and that it was very dark behind the boilers, the following question was asked: “How in walking around them with that lantern, was the light from the lantern sufficient to disclose objects back there so you could see?” Appellant objected to the question on the ground that it was argumentative and called for the opinion and conclusion of the witness.
By its third assignment of error, which embraces the fourth, sixth, seventh and eighth, as set out in the record, appellant objects to testimony similar to that complained of in its second assignment, and upon practically the same grounds, and for the reasons stated in the discussion of that assignment we hold that this one points out no reversible error and it will be overruled. We will add, however, that the record shows that the evidence here complained of had been introduced, without objection, previous to the making of the objections urged under this assignment, and that when objected to was being brought out on cross examination of the witness.
The fourth assignment of error embraces the fifth and ninth, as they appear in the record, and complains that certain questions asked the witnesses John Pruitt and Bob Johnson were leading. It is sufficient to say in disposing of these assignments, that we have examined the questions referred to and are of the opinion that neither of them in form, or as suggesting the answer desired, is leading.
Complaint is made of the following paragraph of the court’s charge: “It is the duty of a railroad company to exercise ordinary care to furnish its servants and employes a reasonably safe place in which to perform the duties required of them, and when a person enters the employment of a railroad company, or when he is called upon or undertakes the discharge of his duties he has a right to rely upon the assump
Neither was the charge upon the weight of evidence and erroneous in that it failed to require of appellee the exercise of ordinary or any degree of care in the use of such place. Charges, in substantially the form of this one, have been approved often by the appellate courts. It is a correct statement of abstract propositions of law involved in the case, and should not have been complicated with any instruction relating to the degree of care the law imposed upon the appellee in using the ladder. Instructions upon that question were properly reserved for other paragraphs of the charge, wherein the application of the law to the facts upon the question was correctly made.
.The sixth assignment of error complains of that paragraph of the court’s charge, wherein certain facts alleged by appellee for a recovery are grouped and the jury told that if they found said facts existed, to return a verdict in favor of appellee. The substance of the objections to this charge is, that it authorized a recovery against appellant upon a finding by the jury of the existence of the facts therein grouped, without requiring them to further find that the appellee exercised ordinary care for his own safety in using the ladder; that said charge assumes that the appellee, at the time he attempted to ascend the ladder and to knock out the manhead, was in the exercise of ordinary care, when the testimony conclusively shows that the length of the ladder and the manner in which it was placed, were patent and open to ordinary observation, and, that before appellee attempted to remove the manhead, he had observed that the ladder was too short and not fastened. Neither of these objections is well taken. The charge complained of was an affirmative presentation of the appellee’s theory of the case, to which he was entitled, unincumbered with the requirement that, in the event the jury found- the group of facts therein specified, existed, they must further find, in order to return a verdict for appellee, that he was in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety. Whether he exercised
In submitting the defenses urged by appellant, its rights involved in -the issues of contributory negligence and assumed risk were fully protected by separate paragraphs of the court’s main charge and special charges given at the request of the appellant. The second objection is equally untenable. The paragraph of the charge in question certainly did not assume that appellee “at the time he attempted to ascend the ladder and to knock out the manhead was in the exercise of ordinary care,” neither did the evidence conclusively show that the length of the ladder and the manner in which it was placed were patent and open to the observation of the appellee, or that before he attempted to remove the manhead he had observed that the ladder was too short and not fastened. The evidence showed that the conditions, with reference to light and darkness, under which appellee used the ladder and attempted to remove the manhead, were such that those matters became and were peculiarly questions of fact for the determination of the jury.
Appellant’s'seventh assignment of error is as follows: “The court erred in refusing to give to the jury defendant’s special charge No. 6, which is as follows: Tf you believe from the evidence that the plaintiff knew, before going upon the ladder, that it was setting up on the outside of the blowoff pipe, or, if you believe that he discovered that it was so setting while he was going up the ladder; and, if you further believe from the evidence that he knew, or before undertaking to knock the manhead back, after he had unscrewed the same, he knew that the top of the ladder was not resting upon anything, then you are charged that he assumed the risk of using the ladder in that way, and, if you believe from the evidence that he did use the ladder while setting in that manner knowing that it was so setting, and that its being so setting was the cause of the accident, your verdict should, be for the defendant.’ ”
This charge was upon the weight of the evidence and properly refused. It assumes that if the appellee knew that the ladder was sitting up on the outside of the blowoff pipe, or that if he knew that the top of the ladder was not resting upon anything, such position of the ladder made its use dangerous, and that appellee necessarily knew of the danger incident to the use thereof. Such assumption was not authorized by the evidence. Appellee was inexperienced in the character of work he was doing when hurt, and had not been warned of its dangers or instructed as to how the ladder should be placed in using it to knock out the man-head and the court was not authorized to tell the jury, as a matter of law, that, if the appellee knew the ladder was sitting in the position described in the charge, he knew the danger incident to the use of it, while in that position and therefore assumed the risk. Nor can it be
We have carefully considered all of the assignments of error and conclude that none of them disclose reversible error. The evidence was sufficient to show that appellee’s injuries were the result of appellant’s negligence, substantially as alleged, and that appellee was not guilty of contributory negligence, and had not assumed the risk.
The case was submitted upon a charge of which appellant, in our opinion, can not justly complain and the judgment of the court below will be affirmed.