Abilene Light & Water Co. v. Robinson

131 S.W. 299, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 219, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 193
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 25, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 131 S.W. 299 (Abilene Light & Water Co. v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abilene Light & Water Co. v. Robinson, 131 S.W. 299, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 219, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 193 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, Associate Justice.

The Abilene Light & Water Company has appealed from a judgment in favor of W. M. Bobinson for fifteen hundred dollars recovered as damages for injuries sustained by Bobinson as the result of a fall from a pole while he was placing thereon wires for electric lights.

Plaintiff was in the employment of defendant as lineman and on ^he occasion of the accident in controversy was engaged in the construction of a new line of electric light wires. He had full charge of the work of constructing it and was assisted in the work by D. P. Kendall, *220 his co-employee. He selected seventeen poles from a number in defendant’s warehouse; hauled them out to the place where they were to be used and, after erecting them and stringing wires thereon, found that three more poles would be required to complete the proposed line. He telephoned to defendant’s manager requesting him to send the three additional poles required, which the manager sent to him. When plaintiff received the additional poles he erected them and climbed upon one of them for the purpose of stringing.a wire thereon. While thus engaged, the pole broke, causing him to fall to the ground, and by reason of the fall his arm was broken. Plaintiff alleged in his petition that the pole which broke with him was unsound, that it broke by reason of its defective condition, and that defendant was guilty of negligence in selecting and furnishing it to be used by him in the work. The alleged negligence of defendant in the particular just mentioned was the only issue of negligence submitted in the court’s charge to the jury as a basis for a recovery by the plaintiff.

The evidence showed that the pole which broke was about twenty feet long, four inches square, and that it was set in the ground at a depth of approximately eighteen inches. Plaintiff climbed the pole by using spurs attached to his feet and was at the top when the pole broke with him. His assistant, D P. Kendall, testified: “I noticed the particular pole upon which he (Bobinson) was working when he fell. I did not consider the pole unsound, but it was what I would call a light, spongy pine, soft spongy pine. I carried the pole down there some seventy-five or one hundred yards. I put the cross arm on it and carried it down there. I told Bobinson it was a very light-pole; I had hardly ever lifted one of that size. It was sappy pine. ... I suppose the pole broke about two-thirds of the way up the length of the pole. I did not notice particularly, but it broke just below his feet. There was a kind of surly place where it broke. You could see it plainly.”

Plaintiff testified in part as follows: “Hy duties in the discharge of my employment was that of a lineman. The duties of a lineman are to climb the poles and putting wires on them and connecting up transferrers and such as that. George Lowry and n^self were the only two linemen working for the Abilene Light & Water Company at the time. We were the only two for a good while. It only required two men to keep up and extend the line of the Abilene Light & Water Company with now and then a helper, and when I speak of my duties as a lineman my duties comprehend the stretching of the wire and the erecting of the poles and of keeping the line in repair. Those were the only men who were employed by the Abilene Light & Water Company to do that business. When I erected that line I intended to make a good line out of it. I had full charge of the erection of that line, of putting in the poles and of putting in a good line. If there had been any bad or defective poles I would not have put them in there. The company is supposed to send me good poles to climb. I don’t know as any one told me so. I did not get that from my lawyers. It was my business and my duty to erect that *221 line out there and I had full charge of it. I had a helper there with me. It was my business if there was any broken poles, to throw them out. I would not put up a broken pole. The other poles we put up had knots in them. I knew that. I climbed 17 of them. I knew that they were knotty poles but I didn’t pay any attention to broken poles or anything like that. I did not particularly notice this pole when I climbed up on it. I did not know that the pole was unsound at the time I got on it. I had no reason to believe that these poles that I was erecting and climbing out here were not safe.”

W. G. Swenson, defendant’s president and general manager, as a witness for defendant, testified: “The duties of our linemen were to watch the line and if they found anything broken or out of order to repair or fix it, and when new lines were being built to tie on jobs of work. . . . In the construction of the work, the linemen pick out the poles and see that they are such poles as should be set, and so on. The poles are down at the plant and they go and pick out the poles and have them hauled to the place where they are used. . - . 'The linemen are not supposed to set up rotten or bad poles. It is his business to inspect them and see that they are in good shape.”

The principal contentions presented by several assignments are, substantially, first, that there was no evidence to support the allegation of negligence on the part of defendant in sending to plaintiff the pole which broke and caused him to fall; second, that the evidence conclusively shows that the injury sustained by plaintiff was a risk which he assumed. If by the terms of his employment it was made plaintiff’s duty to inspect all poles to be erected by him to determine whether or not" they were suitable for use before he erected them, and to reject those found by him unfit, then appellant is correct in its first contention. While the testimony of Mr. Swenson quoted would show that such was one of the plaintiff’s duties, yet that testimony, jo some extent at least, was controverted by the testimony of plaintiff above set out. If it was not the duty of plaintiff to inspect the poles which were sent to him by defendant’s general manager, to determine whether or not they were suitable.for the use intended, then it was the duty of the latter to exercise ordinary care to select poles reasonably safe for such use as defendant ought reasonably to have anticipated plaintiff would make of them. If it was the duty of defendant to exercise ordinary care to select and send to plaintiff poles free of such defects as existed in the one which caused it to break, and if defendant failed to discharge that duty and such failure was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury, then plaintiff did not assume the risk of injury to himself by climbing, the pole which broke with him, unless he knew that the pole was defective, or in the ordinary discharge of his own duty must necessarily have acquired that knowledge. Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Hannig, 91 Texas, 347. B"or do we think that the evidence conclusively shows that plaintiff was himself guilty of negligence proximately contributing to his injury in climbing the defective pole instead of ascending it by using a ladder.

*222 Appellant insists further that the evidence conclusively shows that plaintiff was guilty of negligence proximately contributing to his injury in failing to discover the defect in the pole at the time he erected it.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Thomas v. Missouri Pac. R. Co.
289 S.W. 448 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1926)
Chicago, R. I. & G. Ry. Co. v. De Bord
132 S.W. 845 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1910)
Chicago, Rock Island & Gulf Railway Co. v. DeBord
132 S.W. 845 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 S.W. 299, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 219, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abilene-light-water-co-v-robinson-texapp-1910.