Dallas Electric Co. v. Mitchell

76 S.W. 935, 33 Tex. Civ. App. 424, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 523
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 7, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 76 S.W. 935 (Dallas Electric Co. v. Mitchell) 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
Dallas Electric Co. v. Mitchell, 76 S.W. 935, 33 Tex. Civ. App. 424, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 523 (Tex. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

TALBOT, Associate Justice.

G. W. Mitchell sued the Dallas Electric Company, E. M. Beardon, as receiver of said Dallas Electric Company, and the Standard Light and Power Compaq, in the- District Court of the Fourteenth Judicial District, to recover damages on account of personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by reason of their negligence. A jury trial on the 13th day of October, 1902, resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff against all of the defendants, and motion for new trial having been overruled, they excepted and appeal.

Appellee alleges, in substance, that the defendants, the Dallas Electric Company and the Standard Light and Power Company, are corporations, duly organized and existing under the laws of Texas, and were on the 4th day of October, 1901. That the defendant, E. M. Beardon, at that time was the duly appointed and acting receiver of the said Dallas Electric Company, and-resided in Dallas County, Texas. That prior to and on said 4th day of October, 1901, the said Dallas Electric Company and the said Standard Light and Power Company were engaged in the production, manufacture and sale of electricity in the city of Dallas, having poles set. along the streets of said city of Dallas and wires strung upon the same to convey electricity to their patrons. That on the said 4th day of October, 1901, appellee was .in the service and employment of the Dallas Electric Company and E. M. Beardon, as receiver thereof, and of each of them, in the capacity of lineman, and while engaged in the line of his duties in handling and transferring wires of the said Dallas Electric Company and E. M. Beardon, from their poles stationed at the northwest corner of Ervay and Manila streets to and upon poles of the Standard Light and Power Company, which were also situated at the corner of Ervay and Marilla streets, he received a severe electrical shock causing him serious and permanent injuries.

He alleges that- John Wood was foreman and vice-principal of the defendants Dallas Electric Company and E. M. Beardon, receiver, and that he, appellee, was under the control and subject to the direction of said Wood, who, as such foreman and vice-principal, had- authority to command, control, employ and discharge appellee and other men work *426 ing with him. Appellee further alleges that before he and those engaged in the work with him began transferring the wires from the poles of the Dallas Electric Company and E. M. Reardon, to the poles of the Standard Light and Power Company, the said John Wood told them to wait until he, Wood, went to a point on Ervay street, north of Manila street and pulled the primary boxes, which, when pulled, cut off all electricity from the wires which they were to handle and transfer. That appellee and the others who were so engaged in said work did not begin work until said Wood returned. That Wood returned to them at the northwest corner of Ervay and Marilla streets in a few minutes, and announced to them that the electricity had been cut off and that the wires were dead, and directed them to proceed to work. That he and those engaged with him at once began to work, transferring said wires, resting under the belief, from what the said foreman had said, that the current of electricity had' been cut off of the wires which he was to handle, and that said wires were dead. That instead of being dead, as he, appellee, supposed, from the statement of said Wood, they were heavily charged with electricity, and that by reason of having come in contact with them he was injured.

The manner of handling the wires and character of injuries sustained were fully set out. Appellee alleged that the cut-off box that said foreman said he would go and pull was situated on a pole on Ervay street north of the point where he was at work, and was a contrivance the purpose of which, when pulled, was to cut off the electricity from the wires and deaden them; that said box was defective, and that the wires that should have passed through it had been jumped out of it, or not so arranged with reference to the wires as to perform, when pulled, the function for which it was . intended. Appellee further alleged that had the said wires and said box been properly arranged, by pulling down the plug of said box said wires could have been killed and freed from electricity, but that .the defendants, Dallas Electric Company and E. M. Reardon, as'receiver thereof, and the Standard Light and Power Company, had caused the said wires to be arranged with reference to said box so that the portion of said wires south could not be deadened or killed and freed from electricity by pulling the plug in the said box. That each of defendants knew of this condition of the box and wires; and could have known by the use of ordinary care that said box and wires were so arranged that said box wouldx not perform the function for which it was designed, and that said wires were live.

That defendants and each of them negligently and carelessly failed to repair and correct the defective arrangement of said wires and box, and failed to notify plaintiff and the said Wood, and that by reason of such negligence and the negligence of the said foreman Wood in failing to ascertain that said wires and box were so defectively arranged, appellee sustained injuries as alleged. Appellee further charged that the Dallas Electric Company, E. M. Reardon, receiver thereof, and the Standard Light and Power Company, at the time he was injured and prior thereto *427 had combined and consolidated, and were in fact operating together as one concern. That each of said defendants was guilty of all the acts of negligence complained of in his petition, and participants therein. That if said work of transferring said wires was not being done and paid for by defendants, or either of them, then the same was being done by some person or persons or association- of persons to plaintiff unknown, but that said work was being done with the full knowledge, acquiescence, consent, and by authority, of defendants and each of them, and for the benefit of defendants and each of them; that each of defendants had represented to appellee and John. Wood that appellee and said Wood and each of the gang working with them, was working for defendants and each of them, and that it was the duty of defendants and each of them to furnish appellee safe appliances with which to work and to exercise ordinary care to avoid injury to him.

The appellants filed separate answers, excepting generally and specially to appellee’s petition. The appellant Dallas Electric Company denied all the allegations in appellee’s petition, and pleaded specially that prior to the 4th day of October all of its properties and plant were in the possession of, and being operated by, E. M. Eeardon, as receiver, who had been duly appointed by the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Texas. The Standard Light and Power Company pleaded a general denial, and E. M. Eeardon pleaded general denial, and that if appellee sustained injuries the same were the result of his own negligence in that appellee was a lineman of large experience and knew it was dangerous to take hold of two different wires at the same time, and notwithstanding such knowledge, he negligently and unnecessarily took hold of 'two separate wires at the same time, but for which he would not have been injured.

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.W. 935, 33 Tex. Civ. App. 424, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-electric-co-v-mitchell-texapp-1903.