Davidson v. Power Board of Pulaski

686 S.W.2d 581, 1984 Tenn. App. LEXIS 3354
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 7, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 686 S.W.2d 581 (Davidson v. Power Board of Pulaski) 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
Davidson v. Power Board of Pulaski, 686 S.W.2d 581, 1984 Tenn. App. LEXIS 3354 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION

TODD, Presiding Judge.

Plaintiff, Mirt C. Davidson, Jr., Administrator, sued the defendants, The Power Board of the City of Pulaski, the City of Pulaski, Ensley Griggs and wife, Cleo Griggs for wrongful death of Grady Wayne Davidson by electrocution which occurred when deceased was assisting in erection of a television antenna which came in contact with a high voltage wire erected and maintained by the Power Board on the property of Mr. & Mrs. Griggs. The case as to the Power Board was heard without a jury under the Governmental Tort Liability Act and dismissed. This partial judgment was duly entered as a final judgment under TRCP Rule 54.02, and plaintiff appealed.

Appellant presents two issues for review as follows:

I. Whether, by a preponderance of the evidence, the power board was grossly negligent in that, using an unregistered engineer, and relying on an inapplicable national electric safety code provision, it designed, constructed and maintained the power line 2½ feet lower than required by the code.
II. Whether, by a preponderance of the evidence, Grady Wayne Davidson was proximately contributorily negligent, where there was no evidence that he was aware of the presence of the overhead power line, or that it was an uninsulated, high voltage electric power line.

On July 6, 1981, a Mr. Jeff McGill undertook to re-erect an antenna pole which had fallen. He planned to lift the pole and insert it into metal bands attached to a wooden post already set in the ground. The deceased, who lived nearby, volunteered to assist Mr. McGill in the work. As the pole was lifted by both men, the antenna attached to the pole came in contact with a 7200 volt uninsulated wire of the Power Board, and the deceased was electrocuted.

The Trial Judge found that the Power Board was not guilty of violating The National Electric Safety Code or the State Electrical Safety Code, TCA § 68-16-104, or TCA §§ 62-2-101 relative to licensure of engineers, that the Power Board was not guilty of gross negligence but was guilty of ordinary negligence and that the deceased was contributorily negligent. Accordingly, the Board was dismissed.

Appellant insists that the Board was guilty of “negligence per se” by constructing its power line 2½ feet below the height required by the National Code. The Code contains a table which purports to state minimum permissible height of electric wires under various conditions. The applicable column of such heights is for wires carrying 750 to 15,000 volts. Within said column, the following heights are listed:

Where wires cross over:

1. Public Streets, alleys or roads in urban or rural districts — 20 feet
[584]*5842. Driveways to residence garages — 20 feet
3. Spaces or ways accessible to pedestrians only — 15 feet
Where wires run along or within the limits of public highways or other public rights of way for traffic:
4. Streets or alleys in urban districts— 20 feet
5. Roads in rural districts — 18 feet

The parties agreed that .887 feet should be added to the above minimum height to compensate for temperature and spacing of support poles.

The parties differed as to the Code minimum because of a disagreement as to the classification of the ground surface over or across which the subject wire was suspended. Plaintiff insisted that situation no. 1, above, and a consequent minimum height of 20 feet (plus .887) was applicable. Defendant insisted that situation no. 3, above, and a consequent minimum height of 15 ft. (plus .887) was applicable.

The critical materiality of the difference is created by the fact that the antenna pole was 16 feet 2 inches long, the top band on the wood post was 5½ feet above the ground, the post was located at a point 7 feet from a point directly under the power line where the ground surface was 1.33 feet below the ground under the power line which was 18 feet 4V2 inches from the ground. Considering the measurements just given, it was shown that, as the pole was inserted into the top band of the post, the top end of the pole would be 18.74 feet above the ground under the power line. Accepting this conclusion, the antenna pole or its attached antenna was likely to touch a power line 18.74 feet above the ground, but not a power line 20.887 feet above the ground.

Russell Jackson, a private forensic electrical engineer, testified for the plaintiff that the proper category of the situation of the power wire was no. 1, above, because the road was open to the public and the duty of the Power Board is no less in respect to a private road open to the public than in respect to a road belonging to the public. He also testified that the situation was covered by category no. 2, above, despite the absence of garages. He denied that category 3, above, was applicable because mobile homes were present at the scene and that they were vehicles. Based upon his foregoing assumptions, he testified that the wire was 2.51 feet too low and did not conform to the “spirit” of the Code. Mr. Jackson also testified that the “road” over which the power line was hung was 9 ft. 4 inches wide, that it consisted of scattered gravel which had been pressed down by vehicular traffic into two parallel “tracks”.

Jim Kelly, a private consulting engineer presented by the Board, stated that the road did not fall within any of the above listed classifications except no. 3. He rejected category no. 2, above, because no garage was served by the road. He rejected categories 4 and 5 because the road was not a public road, but was a private drive. He stated that proper height of the wire under the circumstances was 15.887 feet and that its actual height was 2.48 feet above this requirement. He further testified that, in event none of the situations in the table were applicable, then Sections 210 (15a) and 200 (15a) of the Code requiring “accepted good practices” would be applicable and that the height of the wire did conform to “accepted good practices”.

Elbert Powell, operating superintendent of the Lawrenceburg Power Company, testified that he was familiar with the National Code and the practices of utilities in the area, that the wire in question would be classified as being “over a yard or beside a driveway”, and that he would place it in the category of “Spaces or ways accessible to pedestrians only” because the wire does not “cross over” a driveway and the stated category is the only one which correctly describes the location. He further testified that any height over 15 feet would be “good practice” for that location.

James Hannah, superintendent of the Board’s electric system, testified that the line was erected in 1976 at the request of [585]*585the property owners for serving mobile homes on the property, that the design for the line was prepared by a graduate engineer in accordance with the National Code and approved by the chief engineer of the Board who was a graduate engineer, but that neither of said engineers was a “registered engineer”. Mr. Hannah further testified that the determination of the height of the line was made from the provisions of the National Electric Code for “spaces or ways accessable to pedestrians only”.

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Bluebook (online)
686 S.W.2d 581, 1984 Tenn. App. LEXIS 3354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-v-power-board-of-pulaski-tennctapp-1984.