Alley v. Texas Electric Service Co.

134 S.W.2d 762
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 1939
DocketNo. 1953.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 134 S.W.2d 762 (Alley v. Texas Electric Service Co.) 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
Alley v. Texas Electric Service Co., 134 S.W.2d 762 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

GRISSOM, Justice.

Mrs. Louise Alley, widow of Frank Alley, deceased, for herself and for the benefit of Mrs. Lora Allen, mother of deceased, brought this suit against Texas Electric Service Company for damages caused by the death of Frank Alley, which, plaintiff alleged, resulted from defendant’s negligence. Plaintiff alleged that defendant’s high line ran across a pasture rented by the Alleys; “that the high line was strung along the poles * * *; that the poles were about thirty feet high, and carried a large ‘ground wire’ which was attached to the pole near the cross arms carrying the copper, or transmission, wires, which copper wires were then and there transmitting and carrying a large voltage of electricity; that the ground wire, after being affixed to the pole, was carried down the pole to the ground and into the ground to the butt end of the pole; that the ground wire originally was held by two-inch metal staples driven into the pole and over said wire at intervals of about twenty-four to thirty six inches.” Plaintiff alleged defendant was carrying electric current on its high line in excess of 10,000 volts on January 30, 1936, at the place in question; that such voltage was highly dangerous to a man if permitted to come in contact with him; that the high line and- ground wire were uninsulated; that in the exercise of ordinary care both would have been insulated; that while Frank Alley was lawfully on said land ana premises rented by him and “while strolling along the fence next to a public highway, and on the inside of said fence, and under defendant’s said high line, he * * * came in contact with the ground wire attached to, or which had been attached to, one of the poles of defendant; and as a result of such contact received a charge of electricity emanating from defendant’s said high line, which said charge caused his instant death.” Negligence was alleged in permitting the electric current to escape from the high line into said ground wire; in allowing the ground wire to remain highly charged with escaping current from defendant’s high line; -in failing to have the high line properly insulated so as to prevent the escape of current from the same when coming in contact with other objects, and particularly with said ground wire; in failing to have the ground wire insulated; in failing to reasonably inspect the condition of its high line and ground wire, in order to ascertain whether or not the ground wire had become disengaged from the pole and in contact with the high line.

In the alternative, plaintiff alleged that the high line and ground wire and the flow of electricity through them were under the control of defendant; that plaintiff did not know in what manner her husband met his death “and has no way of proving how it did happen *' * * but says that it was brought about through some negligence of the defendant. * * * in the handling of verv high and dangerous *764 voltage of electricity along its high line * * * and in some manner negligently permitting the ground wire, attached to one of its poles, or which had been attached to one of its poles, to become charged with such an amount of electricity emanating from the high line * * * as when coming in contact with the said Frank Alley, to bring about his instant death. That the defendant herein is in a better position to know how the death of Frank Alley * * * came about and what caused it, than is the plaintiff. Plaintiff would further show to the court that in the handling of electricity from point to point through high transmission lines, as was being done in this case, by the defendant, when the proper degree of care is used by those operating such agencies, death does not ordinarily follow the contact of a human being with a ground wire attached to its poles, as in this instance; that the cause of the death of Frank Alley, plaintiff’s husband, was proximately brought about by the negligence of this defendant in some manner to plaintiff unknown.”

Defendant answered by general demurrer, special exceptions, general denial, plea of two years’ statute of limitations, and specially that deceased, just prior to his death, was attempting to remove the ground wire, which was securely attached to defendant’s pole, and that in so doing he caused the ground wire to come in such close proximity to the transmission line as to cause the electricity to pass from the transmission line to the ground wire in such amount as to cause his death. That the wire and pole were the property of defendant; that deceased in attempting to remove the same was doing so without the knowledge or consent of defendant. That deceased was guilty of negligence in so attempting to remove said ground wire from said pole which was the sole proximate cause of his death, and if not the sole proximate cause, that such negligence was a proximately contributing cause thereof.

At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, the court discharged the jury and rendered judgment for defendant. Plaintiff has appealed.

Plaintiff assigns as error the action of the court in “sustaining defendant’s motion to instruct a verdict in favor of the defendant” and in rendering judgment against plaintiff and in favor of defendant. Plaintiff’s proposition is stated as follows:

“Where the undisputed evidence showed that the decedent met his death while on premises where he had a right to be, and was killed by a charge of electricity from defendant’s high line, received through a ground wire, uninsulated and disengaged from the pole where it had been fastened and lying upon his body; and that the high line and ground wire were in the exclusive care, custody and control of the defendant; in the absence of any explanation from the defendant as to the cause of the death, the evidence was sufficient to warrant the inference that his death was caused by the negligence of the defendant.”

The following is, in substance, all the evidence pertinent to the questions to be hereinafter discussed:

Mr. Adams, an undertaker to whom the body of deceased was taken immediately after his death, testified he was of the opinion deceased died from burns.

Plaintiff testified that defendant’s high line was situated just inside the fence of the Alley pasture; that the pasture was surrounded by a wire fence; that Raymond Moore and his wife (plaintiff and Mrs. Moore having been reared together) spent the night of January 29, 1936, with the Alleys; that about 2:30 in the afternoon of January 30, 1936, Mrs. Alley and Mrs. Moore went to Roscoe, leaving their husbands at the Alley home; that Mrs. Alley next saw her husband at the undertakers between 3:30 and 4:00 o’clock that afternoon.

W. E. and B. M. Cooper were about a half mile from the Alley home at the time Mr. Alley was injured. The sun was shining but there was snow on the ground and it was slick and muddy. About 2:30 o’clock they heard a noise; almost immediately afterwards they saw Raymond Moore rush from the Alley pasture near the post where deceased was found, waving his arms, calling, and coming toward the Coopers. The Coopers got in a car and went to meet Moore. They stopped at defendant’s electric light pole No. 22-2, a short distance from the Alley home and inside the Alley pasture. The Coopers and Moore got out of the car and went under the fence. The bottom wire of the fence was broken about four or five steps from pole 22-2. They found Mr. Alley lying on his back nine or ten feet, southwest of said pole, and about the same distance from the pasture fence. Most of his clothing was burned off.

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134 S.W.2d 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alley-v-texas-electric-service-co-texapp-1939.