Arkansas Power & Light Co. v. Mason

87 S.W.2d 988, 191 Ark. 804, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 364
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 25, 1935
Docket4-4015 and 4-4135
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 87 S.W.2d 988 (Arkansas Power & Light Co. v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arkansas Power & Light Co. v. Mason, 87 S.W.2d 988, 191 Ark. 804, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 364 (Ark. 1935).

Opinion

Smith, J.

J. M. Mason brought this suit in his own name and for his own benefit and also as father and next friend of his infant son, John Henry, to recover damages to compensate an injury to his infant son which resulted in the loss of both his son’s hands and a part of both arms. The injury complained of necessitated the amputation of, both arms just below the elbows. The plaintiff recovered judgment for his own benefit in the sum of $5,000 and for the benefit of his son in the sum of $55,000 from which is this appeal.

The ease was tried upon the theory that the boy, who was 12 years old, had come in contact with a defectively insulated guy wire attached to a pole of appellant, Arkansas Power & Light Company’s, electric line situated on land leased to the father of the child. Testimony was offered to the effect that the Power & Light Company had negligently allowed its defectively insulated guy wire to become charged with a heavy voltage of electricity. The defenses were made (a) that the guy wires of the pole, which was No. 465, where the boy was said to have been injured, were not and could not have been charged with electricity, and (b) that the boy was not burned at this pole but was in fact burned on a pole constructed, owned and operated by the city of Conway on a line running to the city’s pumping station, which supplied the city with water pumped from Oadron Creek some miles from the city. The power lines will hereinafter be distinguished by referring to one as the city’s line and to the other as the company’s line. The city’s line is located between the house occupied by the plaintiff, Mason, and his family, and the company’s line. The company’s pole No. 465 measures 48 feet from the ground to the top and is 28 feet from the ground to the first cross-arm and 10 feet from the first cross-arm to the second cross-arm. It is eight feet from the lower cross-arm to the point where the guy wires are attached to the pole. There are two wires on the top arm and one on the lower and each carry 66,000 volts of electricity. The city’s pole where the appellant contends the boy was burned is about 400 feet distant from the light company’s pole, and is 22 feet, 9% inches out of the ground and carries a. 6,600 voltage. There is no guy wire attached to it.

In going from the house occupied by the Mason family to appellant’s pole, which is in a wood lot controlled by the plaintiff on top of a hill where it is claimed the boy was burned and in returning from that pole to the house one must of necessity walk under the city’s electric line.

On the day of the injury, which occurred between 4 and 5 p. m., February 12, 1934, the injured boy, who is 12 years old, accompanied by his younger brother, James, was on top of the hill engaged in sawing up a fallen tree into blocks with a cross-cut saw. This tree was near pole No. 465. After the blocks were sawed, they were hauled in a little iron wagon to the Mason home. Be-turning from one of these trips the younger brother started to lie down to rest when the older boy walked over to the defectively insulated guy wires attached to the company’s pole No. 465 and while standing on the ground took hold of the guy wire and was burned on his hands and arms. This is the account of the injury as testified to by the plaintiff’s two sons.

Opposed to this testimony was that in behalf of appellant to the effect that John Henry, the injured boy, was not found under pole No. 465, belonging to the company, but was found 400 feet down the hill and near one of the poles belonging to the city. The younger boy testified that lie assisted bis older brother to walk this distance after he had been burned. Mrs. Lucille Martin, a neighbor of the Mason’s, testified that she saw John Henry on top of the city pole. She heard a noise like an airplane and looking up saw two balls of fire. She saw the little boy fall from the pole and roll down the hill out of her sight. She saw Mr. Turner go to the boy. Mr. Turner was the first person to reach the boy.

Turner testified that ivhen he came to the boy he thought the boy was dead, but found by running his hand in the boy’s bosom that he was not.' He found the‘boy some feet from the city’s pole. On the morning following the accident Turner pointed out to J. C. Smith the pole where he found the boy. Smith testified that he was the lineman in charge of the city’s electric lines, and that he climbed the pole which Turner had pointed out to him and upon reaching the wares he found on one of them some freshly burned flesh. Ferrell F. Fulmer testified that he lived near the scene.of the accident. He heard a loud noise on one of the city’s poles and a few minutes later saw Turner carrying the boy away from the city pole.

Certain rebuttal testimony was offered touching the opportunities the defendant’s witnesses had had to see the things about which they testified.

Under the instruction of the court, the jury was required to find, before returning a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, that the boy was burned at the company’s pole and not at the city’s pole. Under the testimony herein summarized the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff.

The complaint was filed in the Boone Circuit Court on November 16, 1934, about which time the plaintiff removed to that county. There was a trial to a jury beginning on January 18, 1935, and the verdict was rendered on January 19, 1935. A motion for a new trial was filed January 22, 1935, and overruled on the same day. On June 6, 1935, and after the expiration of the term of court at which the verdict was returned and the judgment herein entered, the defendant Power & Light Company filed a second motion for a new trial on the ground of newly-discovered evidence. A demurrer was filed io the motion attacking the sufficiency of its allegations. The demurrer was sustained, .and, the defendant declining to plead further, the motion was overruled and the new trial was refused. As a majority of the court think this was error, we discuss no other question.

The motion for a new trial with the supporting affidavits covers 30 pages of the transcript, and it is therefore too long to be copied into this opinion but excerpts from it read as follows:

“Petitioner stated that, since the trial of this action and since the overruling of its motion for a new trial, it has discovered new evidence which will justify this court in granting to it a new trial. Petitioner states that it did not know of the existence of ‘this newly-discovered evidence at the time of the former trial and could not have known of such evidence by the exercise of due diligence; that the new evidence is relevant and material to the issues involved and of such character and cogency that it will change or at least probably change the outcome of this litigation. Petitioner states that when the accident to John Henry Mason occurred on February 12,1934, it was reported as having occurred upon the electric line of the city of Conway and the newspapers, in reporting the news of the accident, stated that John Henry Mason had received electric burns on the city of Conway lines. It was not until many months later, when the suit was filed at Harrison, Arkansas, in November, that the petitioner knew that an effort would be made to place the liability for this accident on it.

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.W.2d 988, 191 Ark. 804, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arkansas-power-light-co-v-mason-ark-1935.