Athens Electric Light & Power Co. v. Tanner

225 S.W. 421, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1039
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 20, 1920
DocketNo. 8393.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 225 S.W. 421 (Athens Electric Light & Power Co. v. Tanner) 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
Athens Electric Light & Power Co. v. Tanner, 225 S.W. 421, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1039 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

HAMILTON, J.

This suit was instituted by appellee to recover damages for personal injury alleged to have been proximately caused by the negligence of appellant in failing to incase with a visible shield a guy wire attached to a light pole in or near a street in the town of Athens.

Appellee alleged that on January 21, 1919, he was riding horseback and driving cattle along the street, and that while he was riding after the cattle his horse got astraddle of the wire and became frightened, and that at the, same time he came in contact with and saw the wire himself and bowed down to pass under it, but that the action of the horse, together with his own entanglement with the wire, caused him to fall to the ground and break his arm. • He alleged that he could not see the wire and could not know its location, because there was no shield or covering on if by which it could be seen.

*423 Appellant demurred to the petition and answered denying the allegations, pleading contributory negligence, and affirmatively alleging that appellee rode his horse out of and away from the street to the location of the guy wire and thereby came in contact with it and received his injury and hence could not recover; and also pleading that at the time and place of the injury appellee was driving loose cattle over and across streets and roadways and private property without sufficient assistance to keep them oft of sidewálks and private property, in violation of an ordinance of Athens, specially pleaded.

The ease was tried before the court and a jury. The verdict and judgment were against appellant, and it prosecutes this appeal.

Appellant vigorously argues that its general demurrer ought to have been sustained because the petition alleges a set of facts which show that the injuries complained of proximately resulted from appellee’s own negligent acts, and not from the negligence of appellant in failing to perform any duty to prevent injury to him, contending that the petition discloses that appellee rode his horse out of the public road to the location of the guy wire, which was where appellant owed no duty to protect any person from injury caused by it.

The allegations of the petition as to where the guy wire was with reference to the street are not altogether clear. It is alleged that appellant “had erected on one of'the roads or streets in the west portion of the said city of Athens, and near said road or street, a post which was fastened or stationed with at least one guy wire extending from the top of said post to the ground. * * * ” Elsewhere it is alleged that the post and guy wire were established and erected “next to and adjoining” a public street or road in Athens — a popular street in constant use by people traveling upon it by means of all. the various modes of travel upon such highways and extending through a densely populated portion of the town,

Again, it is alleged that the defendant and its employés negligently placed “said post and. gay wire on and near the said street or road; that the said guy wire and post are within 3 or 4 feet of the said street or road that is continuously occupied and used by travelers with buggies and automobiles, wagons, and horseback riders.”

[1] Under a construction to test the effect of a general demurrer, these allegations, taken in connection with all others the petition contains, we think sufficient, however slipshod they may be, to place the wire either in the street or so dose upon it as to imply the requirement of reasonable protection of travelers from contact with it and render available to appellee the introduction of proof which might establish facts from which the jury could rightfully conclude that the law imposed a duty upon appellant to protect travelers in appellee’s situation from such, injuries as he received, or similar injuries, and that his injuries were the direct and proximate result of a breach of that duty. In other words, the allegations are such as to show negligence on the part of appellant proximately causing appellee’s injuries.

[2, 3] We do not understand that in order to show actionable negligence the pleadings must allege an actual, physical appropriation of the roadway itself by the manner of use of the guy wire which caused the injury. The owners of private property abutting upon a public thoroughfare, especially in a town or city where it is subjected to the extraordinary uses imposed upon highways in thickly populated centers, are declared to owe a legal duty to exercise reasonable care for the protection of travelers from unintended injury caused by dangerous things placed immediately against the road on their premises. Even if the allegations in.this case are such that appellee might possibly be said to have alleged the guy wire not to be in the roadway itself, yet, if it were so situated with reference to the roadway and so near as to be adjoining it and if its situation with reference to the known general uses of the road were such that the appellant might have foreseen, by the exercise of reasonable care, that some injury would probably result to persons traveling the road if the wire were not shielded, then appellant would be guilty of negligence. And in any view we can take of the allegations, they were sufficient to allege an act of negligence. South Texas Tel. Co. v. Tabb, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 213, 114 S. W. 448; City of Ft. Worth v. Williams, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 291, 119 S. W. 137; Unglaub v. Farmers’ Mutual Tel. Co., 39 S. D. 355, 164 N. W. 104; Davidson v. Utah Independent Tel. Co., 34 Utah, 249, 97 Pac. 124.

[4, 5] We think appellant’s proposition that the allegations make appellee’s own acts in riding out of the roadway and upon the guy wire the proximate cause of the injury is untenable. “Proximate cause” is defined to be that which, in a natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by any new independent cause, produces the event, and without which the event would not have occurred. See chapter 2, vol. 1, Shearman and Rediield on the Law of Negligence. It is not necessarily the cause which, by measure either of space or time, stands next in proximity to the occurrence. It is that which sets in motion the continuous, uninterrupted happenings which naturally produce the injury. It is the causa sine qua non; and, while appellee would-not have fallen and broken his arm except for the movements of his frightened horse coupled with his own efforts to dodge under the guy wire, the presence of the wire either actually in the highway or next to and adjoining it without’a shield which could be seen alone brought about that situation.

[6, 7] We overrule the second assignment of error, which complains of the court’s saying *424 in the charge to the jury that the undisputed evidence shows that the electric light was erected “at just north of, and adjacent to, the street and road, where the alleged injury occurred.” This is not on the weight of the evidence so as to authorize appellant to complain. However, we do not understand the undisputed evidence to be to the effect that the light was just north of and adjacent tothe street. There seems to he evidence that the pole to which the light was attached was upon land which was set apart from private use to street use. The plaintiff testified:

“That street down there in front of Mr. J. M.

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Bluebook (online)
225 S.W. 421, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/athens-electric-light-power-co-v-tanner-texapp-1920.