Cleburne Electric & Gas Co. v. McCoy

149 S.W. 534, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 926
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 1, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 534 (Cleburne Electric & Gas Co. v. McCoy) 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
Cleburne Electric & Gas Co. v. McCoy, 149 S.W. 534, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 926 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

This is the second appeal of this case. The opidion on the former appeal will be found in 128 S. W. 457. The suit was instituted by Mrs. Lertie McOoy, for herself and minor children, Ray McCoy and Charlie McCoy, in 1908, against the appellant, the Cleburne Electric & Gas Company, to recover damages sustained by them on account of the death of the said C. W. Mc-Ooy, husband of Mrs. Lertie McCoy and father of her said children, charged to have been caused by the negligence of appellant. The petition alleged, in substance, that the defendant, a corporation created under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Texas, operated an electric light plant in the city of Cleburne by means of poles and wires stretched thereon along and over the different streets of said city, and that the Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Company, also a corporation, likewise operated a telephone plant in said city; that on North Ang-lin street the Telephone Company stretched a drop wire from one of its poles on the east side of said street under the wires of the defendant connecting with a telephone in the house of Mr. Norseworthy, situated on the west side of said street; that on the 31st day of January, 1908, C. W. McCoy, while in the performance of his ’duties as an employs of the Telephone Company on a telephone pole of said company, came in contact with a live wire of the Telephone Company, the electricity being communicated thereto by a wire of defendant charged with about 1,100 volts, which passed into and through the body of the said McCoy, from the effects of which he died.

The grounds of negligence charged and submitted by the court were substántially as follows: (1) That, while performing work on its wires running above the Norseworthy telephone line the day before the accident, the appellant caused its wires to sag and come in contact with the telephone wires, and then failed to discover and remove the same. (2) That appellant discovered about 5 o’clock on the morning preceding McCoy's injury that its wires were “grounded,” and probably in contact with the telephone wires, and in ample time to have discovered and removed the contact, and that it failed to make a proper inspection of its wires to discover and remove the “ground” or place of contact. (3) That after appellant knew that McCoy was working on the pole on which he was injured among the telephone wires, and after it knew that it had not discovered and removed the “ground,” or place of contact, it turned onto its wires a heavy charge of electricity calculated to injure or cause the death of any person coming in contact with it.

The defendant, Cleburne Electric & Gas Company, pleaded general and special demurrers, a general denial, assumed risk, contributory negligence, and specially, among other things, that the defendant, being a corporation, it could not, under the law of this state, be held responsible to the plaintiffs for the negligence of its servants and agents; that, if any person’s negligence caused the death of C. W. McCoy, it was not the negligence of the defendant, but was the negligence of the Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Company, or the negligence of the said McCoy himself; that the wire of the defendant at the point of contact with the Telephone Company’s wire was insulated, but that the wire of the Telephone Company was not insulated; that the negligence of the Telephone Company in stretching an uninsulated wire underneath and so close to defendant’s wires was the proximate cause of C. W. McCoy’s death; that C. W. McCoy, before and at the time of his injury and death, was an employe of the Telephone Company; that it was his duty to inspect 'and repair the lines of the Telephone Company; that he was an experienced lineman and well understood the dangerous character of his work; that, at the time he was injured, he was at work on the Telephone Company’s wires and knew the wires of the defendant and of the Telephone Company were in contact between the pole upon which he was at work and the next pole south, and that it was dangerous to go upon said pole and work with or among the wires thereon. Said defendant also by an amended answer filed January 19, 1911, impleaded the Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Company, and by way of cross-action against that company charg *536 ed, so far as is necessary 'to state, that said Telephone Company constructed its wires crossing Anglin street under the wires of the Electric Company about the 1st day of January, 1907; .that said telephone wires were not insulated; that the same passed through the limbs of a tree; that said telephone wires were suspended near or close to the Electric Company’s wires; that proper construction required the telephone wires to be insulated and to be grounded and to be free from obstructions such as trees and limbs, all of which the Telephone Company failed to do; that McCoy was an employs of the Telephone Company, as an inspector, a trouble-shooter, a finder of defects and contacts, whose duty it was to remedy the same, and that McCoy should have known, from the conditions existing, all the dangers incident to the performance of his labors, and that, if he did not, the fault lies with the Telephone Company either in failing to instruct him as to his duties or warning him of the dangers or in keeping him in that employ without such knowledge, and that the Telephone Company was guilty of negligence in failing to notify the Electric Company of the hazardous conditions existing so that proper precautions could be taken; that it is customary for telephone companies, where trouble happens on their lines, to make or cause to be made inspection as to the condition of its wires, especially where the same pass near electric wires, and to inspect the appliances in the central office and apply tests to locate trouble so that proper inspection and all existing interferences, contacts, etc., can be ascertained and remedied, and a failure to use and employ these precautions and make these inspections, give these directions, etc., is a failure to perform a duty devolving upon the Telephone Company, and this the Telephone Company did not do; that if McCoy was injured, as alleged by plaintiffs, then the Telephone Company was the active wrongdoer, and, if the plaintiffs recovered against it in any sense, then the Electric Company should have judgment over against the Telephone Company for a like sum; and such was the Electric Company’s prayer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 534, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleburne-electric-gas-co-v-mccoy-texapp-1912.