
    WATERMAN LUMBER CO. v. BEATTY.
    (No. 3254.)
    (Supreme Court of Texas.
    Feb. 4, 1920.)
    1. Negligence <§=>56(3) — Violation of statute MUST BE PROXIMATE CAUSE OF INJURY.
    It is essential to the maintenance of an action for damages for personal injury, founded on the violation of a statute, to establish not only the violation, but that such violation was the proximate cause of the injury.
    2. Appeal and error <§=»232(3) — Review of INSTRUCTIONS CONFINED TO GROUND OF OBJECTION MADE.
    In a trial governed by Vernon’s Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1914, art. 1971, under which all objections not presented to the charge must be considered waived, defendant may not complain of failure to charge that plaintiff servant’s personal injury must be found to be the proximate result of the alleged negligent violation of a statute', where the objection below was that the
    
      evidence was insufficient to support a finding for plaintiff on ground stated in charge.
    8. Master and servant @=>95—Minor’s EMPLOYMENT ON TRAM RAILROAD ENGINE UNLAWFUL “ESTABLISHMENT.”
    Tram railroads, log-loading appliances, and an engine, permanently used in manufacturing logs into lumber, were a part of the defendant lumber company’s establishment, within Acts 32d Leg. (1911) c. 46, § 1, making it a misdemeanor to employ a child under 15 years of age “to labor in or about any manufacturing or other establishment using dangerous machinery,” so as to make the company liable to such minor for injuries received while sanding the track from the footboard of the engine.
    [Ed. Note.—Eor other definitions, see Words and Phrases, First and Second Series, Establishment.]
    Error to Court of Civil Appeals of Sixth Supreme Judicial District.
    Action by Dave Beatty against the Waterman Lumber Company. A judgment for plaintiff was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals (204 S. W. 448), and defendant brings error.
    Judgment of the district court and Court of Civil Appeals affirmed.
    F. H. Prendergast, of Marshall, for plaintiff in error.
    T. W. Davidson, of Marshall, for defendant in error.
   GREENWOOD, J.

The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed a judgment in favor of defendant in error against plaintiff in error for damages for personal injuries.

Plaintiff in error attacks the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals, to the effect that there was no error in that portion of the trial court’s charge wherein the jury were authorized to return a verdict for defendant in error, if they believed that at the time of his injury, on or about the 9th day of May, 1917, defendant in error was a minor under the age of 15 years, and if they further believed that his injuries were received on account of being employed by plaintiff in error to labor about the manufacturing establishment of plaintiff in error, using dangerous machinery.

The writ of error was granted because we -were inclined to believe that the charge was erroneous, in not 'requiring a finding that the employment of defendant in error was the proximate cause of his injury. There is no doubt that it is essential to the maintenance of an action for damages for a personal injury, founded on the violation of a statute, to establish, not only a violation of the statute, but that the violation was the proximate cause of the injury. Though the violation of the statute would be negligence per se, the action would fail without a showing of proper causal connection between the negligence and the injury. Shear-man & Redfield, Law of Negligence (Street’s Ed.) § 27; T. & P. Ry. Co. v. Bigham, 90 Tex. 225, 38 S. W. 162; Spokane & Inland R. R. v. Campbell, 241 U. S. 510, 36 Sup. Ct. 683, 60 L. Ed. 1125; Stirling v. Bettis Mfg. Co. (Civ. App.) 159 S. W. 916; Elk Cotton Mills v. Grant, 140 Ga. 727, 79 S. E, 836, 48 L. R. A. (N. S.) 656. It follows that there was the same necessity for a proper application of the thoroughly settled law of proximate cause in this case as in the ordinary negligence case involving no violation of a statute.

However, plaintiff in error is not in a position to ask a reversal because of any defect in the charge, in not requiring the jury to find that defendant in error’s ihjury was the proximate result of the alleged negligence. For the trial was governed by article 1971 of Vemon’s Say les’ Texas Civil Statutes, under which all objections not presented to the charge must be considered as waived. The single objection to the charge under consideration was that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding for defendant .in error on the ground stated in the charge. Clearly this objection did not call the court’s attention to any necessity for further findings under the law of proximate cause than those required by the charge.

Plaintiff in error assigns error on the refusal to peremptorily direct a verdict in its favor and on the refusal to grant it a new trial, upon the ground that the uncontradict-ed evidence showed that the injuries of defendant in error were not received on account of his being employed by plaintiff in error to labor in or about a manufacturing establishment using dangerous machinery. Our decision of these assignments is largely controlled by our interpretation of section 1 of the act of March 13, 1911, regulating child labor. General Laws of 32d Legislature, p. 75. The applicable portion of the section declared it a misdemeanor to employ a child under the age of 15 years “to labor in or about any manufacturing or other establishment using dangerous machinery.”

The Waterman Lumber Company, plaintiff in error, is a corporation engaged in the manufacture of lumber, owning a mill at Blocker, on the Marshall & East Texas Railroad. The company owns a tram railroad, which intersects the Marshall & East Texas Railroad about a mile east of Blocker, and extends in a southerly direction to another mill owned by the company, which is known as the Horton mill, and the tram railroad then extends from the Horton mill into the woods for a distance of some 12 miles. The company owns another tram railroad, which connects with the Marshall & East Texas Railroad a short distance west of Blocker, and extends thence into the woods in a southerly direction. The tram railroads were used by the lumber company to haul logs from the woods and to liaul lumber from the Horton mill to Blocker.

The injured minor, Dave Beatty, was primarily employed, as found by the Court of Civil Appeals, to perform the following service:

“The lumber company owned some logging cars, and on one of these cars was a machine operated by steam, and attached to this machine was a drum, on which was wound a long rope. Beatty would take his mule and hitch to the end of this rope, and ride the mule out into the woods where a log had been prepared, and another man would then hitch the end of the wire rope onto the log with clamps or tongs. Wayne Phillips [who was Beatty’s foreman] then, by operating the machine on the car, would wind the rope onto the drum and drag the log to the side of the track. Then Beatty would hitch his mule to the end of the wire rope with the clamps, and pull it out to the next log to be hauled in.”

It was required of the minor, under bis employment, to aid the men in laying iron rails on the tram railroads running into the woods from the Marshall & East Texas Railroad, and he usually carried water and helped distribute spikes and fish bars where the rails were being put down. There is evidence that Dave Beatty was carried to and from his work by the lumber company over its tram railroads, riding at times on the Shay engine, and that it was his duty to do whatever work he was ordered to do by his foreman, which would include putting sand, on the track while the Shay engine was moving over same.

On the morning of the injury, Dave Beatty started from Horton, where he resided, to go north from Horton on the tram railroad to the Marshall & East Texas Railroad, and thence to the point west of Blocker where that railroad intersects the tram railroad, and then go south for the purpose of aiding in laying rails on the south end of the tram railroad. He started on a hand car, but after proceeding part of the way he left the hand car and mounted the Shay engine. His foreman was operating the engine, and when the engine arrived at a steep down grade, where the tram railroad intersected the Marshall & East Texas Railroad, the minor was directed by his foreman to put sand on the track, and he was in the act of sanding the track, from the footboard at the front of the engine, when in some way he fell on the track and had his leg severely mashed and injured.

It is undeniable that the Waterman Lumber Company was operating a manufacturing establishment, using dangerous machinery. Were the tram railroads, the log-loading appliance, and the Shay engine a part of the company’s manufacturing establishment? They were used permanently and directly in the process of manufacturing logs into lumber, the latter being the product of the company’s regular business, as.well as in the process of delivering lumber to the station of a common carrier, and we see no good reason for differing with the Court of Civil Appeals in the conclusion that they were a part of the manufacturing establishment.

In holding that gas pipes laid in the streets of a city were part of the “establishment” of a gas company, it w;as said in Memphis Gaslight Co. v. State, 6 Cold. (Tenn.) 310, 98 Am. Dec. 453:

“The Memphis Gaslight Company is a corporation created for the purpose- of manufacturing and delivering illuminating gas to the citizens of Memphis. The delivery in a particular mode is as much within the purpose of its creation as the manufacture; and from the nature of the article manufactured, the apparatus for delivery is merely an extension and continuation of the apparatus for manufacture. Both belong to the establishment.”

We think there was evidence to show that the minor was injured by reason of being engaged at the time of his injury in work within the scope of his duty under his employment, which'was of the very character which exposed him to hazards against which the law was intended to shield him in his youthful immaturity.

We find no error entitling plaintiff in error to a reversal of the judgments of the district court and of the Court of Civil Appeals, and the same will therefore be affirmed. 
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