City of Lawrenceburg v. Dyer

11 Tenn. App. 493, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 93
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 23, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 11 Tenn. App. 493 (City of Lawrenceburg v. Dyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Lawrenceburg v. Dyer, 11 Tenn. App. 493, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 93 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

DeWITT, J.

This cause is before this court upon a second appeal in error. The action was brought on July 2, 1925 against the Board of Commissioners of Lawrenceburg, a municipal corporation (hereinafter referred to as the city, or as the defendant), by GL N. Dyer as administrator of the estate of his son, J. T. Dyer, deceased, to recover damages on account of the death of J. T. Dyer, which it was alleged had resulted from the negligent conduct of the agents and servants of the defendant. G-. N. Dyer, administrator is the defendant in error in this court, but for convenience we will refer to him as the plaintiff.

Upon the first trial the plaintiff was awarded by the jury the sum of $8000, but a remittitur of $3000 from the amount of the verdict was suggested and was accepted. Upon the overruling of the motion for a new trial judgment for $5000 was entered. The defendant appealed in error and the judgment was affirmed by this court; but a petition for certiorari was filed in the Supreme Court, the writ was granted, and after hearing argument the Supreme Court in a memorandum opinion by Mr. Justice Chambliss, reversed the *495 judgment and remanded tbe cause for a new trial, upon tbe ground that tbe trial judge did not fully and properly instruct tbe jury that it was tbeir duty to determine on all tbe proof submitted whether or not tbe location of tbe accident was clearly a place where the presence of persons was not reasonably to be anticipated; and that, if they found it to be such a place, then tbe defendant city owed the duty only of not willfully or wantonly injuring’ tbe deceased.

Upon a re-trial in tbe circuit court before tbe court and a jury, tbe jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff for $7750, but tbe trial judge suggested a remittitur of $1250, which was accepted under protest, and tbe plaintiff by an assignment of error in this court insists that it was error to suggest tbe remittitur, that he should have judgment in this court for the full amount awarded by the jury.

The plaintiff in his declaration charges that J. T. Dyer, the deceased, was travelling, as he had the right'to'do, along a path by the power line, which path was open to the public and was a way which a great many people when travelling-on foot would go to the power house and dam located on the creek below, and that in travel-ling this path leading within a foot of the guy wire, he touched the wire and was instantly killed, and the declaration charges the city with negligence in allowing the current to escape from the transmission wires overhead to this guy wire.

The defendant city filed its four pleas, substantially setting up the following defenses, to-wit:

First, the general issue.
Second, contributory negligence.
Third, that the place where the accident occurred was the private property of the city, and that the city owed the defendant no duty at that place, first, because he was a trespasser, and secondly, because it was so inaccessible and rough and difficult of access. that the presence of persons would not reasonably be anticipated at such place.
Fourth, that on account of a violent storm the night before, that if the wires were broken and electricity was escaping, it was on account of the storm, being the act of God, and for which the city was not responsible.

This ease has received thorough consideration by this court. The record has been carefully examined, the briefs and arguments of counsel fully considered, and the authorities relied on have been investigated and taken into full consideration. In disposing of the case upon the former appeal in error the opinion of this court was prepared by Presiding Judge Faw. His opinion contains the following statement which we find now to be fully applicable to the *496 record before us, and which we re-adopt and make a part of this opinion:

“Preliminary to a consideration of the assignments of error, we will state, in brief outline, the main facts which gave rise to this lawsuit. In making* this statement, we shall neither confine ourselves to the undisputed facts nor attempt to point out the conflicts in the evidence. The verdict of the jury has settled all such conflicts in favor of the plaintiff, and, in such case, it is our duty, under a long-established rule, to view the evidence in that aspect most favorable to the plaintiff of which it is reasonably susceptible, and discard all countervailing evidence. There is evidence in the record which, with reasonable inferences therefrom, tends to prove the facts we will now state.
“In the early afternoon of June 25, 1925, plaintiff’s intestate, J. T. Dyer, was killed by contact with a guy wire charged with electricity, and which wire was a part of the municipal lighting system of the defendant city. At that time and theretofore the city operated a hydro-electric power plant for the generation of electric current, which current was used in part for municipal purposes and in part for sale to the inhabitants of the city of Lawrenceburg and its environs. The city’s power house was situated about two miles south of Lawrenceburg, on Shoal creek, and, as a part of its power system, the city maintained two dams across Shoal creek in the vicinity of the power house and transmission lines from the power house to the consumers of electric current in and about Lawrenceburg.
“One of the dams above mentioned was about forty-five feet high and had been built only a few months at the time J. T. Dyer was killed, and the deceased was on his way to the new dam, in company with his cousin, a young man by the name of Clarence Marlow, when he came in-contact with the guy wire which caused his death. The deceased and Marlow lived in a distant part of Lawrence county, probably as much as fifteen miles from Lawrenceburg, and on June 25, 1925, while on their way to Lawrenceburg in a Ford car to get some ice, they decided to visit the new dam, which neither of them had ever seen. Their purposed visit to the dam was merely a sightseeing trip.
‘ ‘ The transmission line of defendant left the backwater above the dam in Shoal creek at a point on land belonging to Henry E. Kelsey (but which was rented to and occupied by Will Flatt as tenant of Kelsey) and passed over the land of Kelsey and thence to Lawrenceburg.
“Deceased and Marlow were not familiar with the neighborhood where the new dam was situated and they stopped their *497 car near Flatt’s borne (on Kelsey’s land) and asked Flatt for information as to the road to the new dam. Flatt informed them that by going back and around some distance they could reach the dam in their car, but that there was a nearer route which they could travel on foot; that they could “go on down the trail to'the creek” and go across the creek in a boat, if the boat was there, but that, if the boat wasn’t there, they could walk around the bluff to the dam.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Tenn. App. 493, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-lawrenceburg-v-dyer-tennctapp-1929.