C. & L. Rural Electric Cooperative Corp. v. McEntire

225 S.W.2d 941, 216 Ark. 276, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 912
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 19, 1949
Docket4-8970
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 225 S.W.2d 941 (C. & L. Rural Electric Cooperative Corp. v. McEntire) 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
C. & L. Rural Electric Cooperative Corp. v. McEntire, 225 S.W.2d 941, 216 Ark. 276, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 912 (Ark. 1949).

Opinion

Griffin Smith, Chief Justice.

McEntire, a construction company employe, was seriously burned and permanently impaired when he came in contact with an electrically-charged wire. Three defendants have appealed from his judgment for $40,000.

C & L Rural Electric Cooperative Corporation operates in Lincoln and other counties as owner of transmission lines and appurtenances. It had an extensive reach in 1947 when new demands prompted expansion. Existing installations had been built by three contractors, one being Delta Construction Company of Clarksdale, Miss. The Federal Government advanced $363,000 through Rural Electrification Administration, acting by an Administrator whose official status with C & L was evidenced by written contract embracing enumerated standards of efficiency. The Administrator required C & L, in its plan for expenditure of the money, to retain certain authority. A supervisor could be named by the Government agency, and the contractor was bound to comply with all reasonable directions that might be given, either by C & L, or the supervisor.

Dickinson & White, electrical engineers, were employed by C & L to draft expansion plans with specifications ; also to let the contract on behalf of C & L, and to supervise construction. Dickinson & White employed E. A. Knoch and Warren A. Ramsey to oversee the work, Delta having procured the contract.

On the nineteenth of June, 1947, McEntire, who was then 26 years of age, met with the misfortune resulting in the litigation. A primary wire on the pole he had climbed carried 7620 volts of undisclosed amperage. His inadvertent contact with it caused burns that later destroyed tissues, nerves, and the circulatory structure of each hand, necessitating amputation four or five inches below the elbows when infection developed. Continuing pain prompted a second operation on the left arm. Comparatively slight injuries to other parts of the body attended the accident, with partial blindness for several hours.

Paul Strode was a Delta superintendent who worked in close cooperation with Knoch and Ramsey. Delta’s temporary offices in Star City were within two or three blocks of quarters occupied by C & L.

On the morning of the nineteenth McEntire’s assistant was Clinton K. Baggett. Each would make wire connections when directed to do so. The duty immediately at hand took them twelve miles south on the Star City-Monticello highway where they left the main thoroughfare and went by a known route to Pole No. 249. The place had been designated by Work Order No. 314, prepared by Ramsey and given to Strode. Pour poles were mentioned in the order, but we are concerned only with what was done when No. 249 was reached. Pertinent parts of the memorandum are shown in the footnote. 1

When the clean-up note was issued, Ramseyq Strode, Delta, Dickinson & White, and C & L, knew that the pole was “hot,” or they were in possession of facts or had access to data from which the information could have been had.

It will be observed that in sequence of transactions Rural Electrification (the Government) dealt with C & L; C & L employed Dickinson & White; Dickinson & White, on behalf of C & L, negotiated the contract with Delta, but also employed Ramsey; Ramsey prepared the inspection or work orders and gave them to Strode, who was Delta’s man, and Strode gave them to appellee. The questions are: Were Dickinson & White independent contractors employed by C & L? If the contract on its face tended to create that relationship, was it the purpose to restrict activities of Dickinson & White to the paper preliminaries, such as plans and specifications, procurement of the contract, and supervision of the contractor’s work as to results alone, and without participation in or interference with the means and methods by which results were accomplished? (a) Was the contract Dickinson & White made for C & L with Delta, embracing as it did express implementation through services of these Engineers, trilateral as to scope — thus insuring overlappings throughout, or (b) did C & L and Dickinson & White as employer and agent, and Delta as the producer of a finished construction, each leave to the other complete freedom of action regarding means and methods? Conversely, if the contracts as such were legally sufficient to make Dickinson & White independent Engineers and Delta an independent contractor, did inter-party actions destroy this design to such an extent that the appellants are bound by the misconduct causing appellee’s misfortune? 2

Contract Between C $ L, and Dichinson $ White.— The Engineers agreed to render necessary services ‘ ‘. . . in respect of rephasing, conversion, rebuilding, or rehabilitation of existing lines, [and] the enumeration of specific duties and obligations . . . shall not be construed to limit the general undertakings of the Engineer. ’ ’

Supervision of construction required the Engineer to inspect all materials and to reject any found inferior to specifications. The Engineer was also to supervise ‘ ‘ the manner of the incorporation of the materials in the project and the workmanship with which such materials shall be incorporated. . . . The Engineer shall notify C & L and the Administrator when the project, or any part thereof, shall be ready to be energized. Whenever C & L and the Administrator shall notify the Engineer that the project, or snch section thereof, may be energized, the Engineer shall, when directed to do so by C & L, cause the project, or such section thereof, to be energized. ’ ’

Contract Between C & L, and Delta — All materials, tools, machinery, equipment, labor, transportation, “and other means necessary [to fulfillment of the contract]” were to be supplied by Delta. All reasonable precautions for the safety of employes engaged in the work were to be taken, with care for safety of the public. Prom commencement until completion, or until C & L should take possession if at an earlier date, control was with the Contractor, who was responsible for “all risks in connection with the construction of the project and the materials to be used therein.” The Contractor was obligated to constantly supervise all work. To this end a competent Superintendent “would be present at all times during working hours where the construction is being carried on, [and] directions and instructions given to [such] Superintendent by the Engineer shall be binding on the Contractor. [C & L] reserves the right to require the removal from the project of any employee of the Contractor if in the judgment of the Engineer such removal shall be in order to protect the interest of [C & L]. The Engineer or the Supervisor, if any, shall have the right to require the Contractor to increase the number of his employes and to increase or change the amount or kind of tools and equipment if at any time the progress of the work shall be unsatisfactory to the Engineer or Supervisor.”

Purpose of the Contracts. — The undertakings contemplated by C & L in 1947 could best be carried out with Grovernment cooperation and borrowed money.

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Bluebook (online)
225 S.W.2d 941, 216 Ark. 276, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-l-rural-electric-cooperative-corp-v-mcentire-ark-1949.