El Paso Electric Co. v. Buck

143 S.W.2d 438, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 698
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 20, 1940
DocketNo. 3952
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 143 S.W.2d 438 (El Paso Electric Co. v. Buck) 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
El Paso Electric Co. v. Buck, 143 S.W.2d 438, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 698 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinions

WALTHALL, Justice.

This is a personal injury case.

This appeal is prosecuted from. a judgment in favor of appellee and against each of appellants.

Appellee is a feme sole. Appellant, El Paso Electric Company, is a corporation, and for years prior to the time involved here has been engaged in the City of El Paso, Texas, and the surrounding territory, in the business of manufacturing, selling and distributing electric current for domestic lighting, cooking, heating and similar purposes, and in connection therewith, and as a. part of said business, appellant Electric Company kept in stock and sold to the public various electrical appliances which the Company customarily installed in purchasers’ homes, and, in this instance, the appellant Electric Company, by defendant Edward M. Nelson, installed appliances, hereinafter referred to, in the home of appellee.'

As a part of the matters of fact involved, and not a part of the issues involved, but, all alleged and shown, the evidence shows without controversy that Prior t0 Januar7 17> 1939> appellee became the owner of a home at 4300 Cumberland Street, m the City of El Paso, Texas, which home, at the time of its purchase by appellee,- was already wired for elec-trie lights; that prior to appellee’s acquisition of the home appellant Electric Company had installed the house for electricity by bringing what is referred to as the feed line in through the walls and into the wall of the bedroom to a meter box placed approximately six or seven feet-above the floor of the bedroom, and left the wires extending into the bedroom and protruding beyond the wall where the meter box had been. Plaintiff, seeing the place where the meter box had been and the protruding wires, undertook to push out the protruding wires, fill the hole in the wall, and in an effort to do so came hr contact with the live wires so protrud-⅛ from the wall> and received the injuries complained of.

On November 7, 1938, appellee bought from appellant Electric Company an elec-trie range and an electric water heater ⅛6 Company agreed to and did install through appellant Nelson, as above stated, in appellee’s house.

Appellee charged both appellants with negligence in installing the said appliances as above and submitted in the. court’s charge to the jury.

Under the instructions submitted the jury found: Plaintiff received an electrical shock while undertaking to cut ,a wire protruding from the wall of her bedroom, which wire defendant Nelson had cut and left protruding in connection with installing electrical appliances by the defendant El Paso Electric Company in the home of the plaintiff; that defendant Nelson was negligent in leaving the two wires protruding from 'the wall of plaintiff’s bedroom; that such negligence was a [440]*440proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries; the failure of Nelson to warn plaintiff that the two wires left protruding from her bedroom wall in connection with the installation of electrical appliances were energized was negligence, and that such negligence was a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury; that the disconnecting of the wires from the meter on the wall of the plaintiff’s bedroom was fairly incidental to the performance of the contract for the installation of the electrical appliances mentioned in the written contract between plaintiff' and the El Paso Electric Company; that Under the contract between Nelson and the El Paso Electric Company for the installation of the electrical fixtures in the home of plaintiff, the El Paso Electric Company had the right of control over Nelson in the mode and manner of the execution of the work, and the right to control and direct the details thereof; the work which the El Paso Electric Company caused Nelson to do in the home of the plaintiff was of a character inherently and intrinsically dangerous unless proper safeguards to avoid injury to the occupants of the building were taken by the individuals doing the work.

The jury found for plaintiff on all issues submitted on contributory negligence, and assessed plaintiff’s damages.

The court overruled the several motions of each of defendants for judgment and for a new trial and rendered judgment on the verdict of the jury that plaintiff recover from the defendants jointly and severally the sum of ■ $8,500, with interest thereon at six per cent per annum from May 12, 1939; that El Paso Electric Company recover of Nelson all sums, together with costs, which the Electric Company may pay to plaintiff under the judgment. Each of the defendants appealed and filed briefs.

Appellant El Paso Electric Company, as one of its defensive matters, pleaded by cross action against Nelson that its co-defendant Nelson did the entire work of installing the electric heater and range and the matter of wiring the plaintiff’s house in connection therewith; that Nelson was an electrician and electrical contractor performing and doing the work of installing electrical wires in plaintiff’s building, and was doing the work under a cost plus basis, and entirely under his own control and direction, independent of defendant El Paso Electric Company, Nelson employing the labor and furnishing the tools upon his own responsibility, and was paid therefor by the job.

The El Paso Electric Company submits that the above facts as to Nelson being an independent contractor in installing the stove and range, and in doing the wiring referred to, there was no evidence that it was guilty of any act of omission or commission constituting negligence; no evidence of any breach of its contract in the matter of installing the equipment; that the court erred in submitting the case to the jury, over the objection of appellant.

We do not conceive the primary or ultimate question to be whether Nelson was an independent contractor in installing the electrical appliances in appellee’s home, but to us the question is, that where the El Paso Electric Company has contracted to install such appliances, and has undertaken to do so, and where the installation necessary requires the use of wires carrying electricity, rendering it an exceedingly dangerous condition when not properly protected,, and where the contract to install the appliances expressly or impliedly makes it-the duty of the contractor to do what» is. reasonably necessary to protect against such dangerous condition, the contractor would' be liable for any injury sustained by the-owner or occupant of the house, whether the party actually doing the work of installing the appliances was an independent contractor or not.

To us the question seems to be: Did the-work of installing the appliances create such dangerous condition in appellee’s bedroom as would reasonably require a protection against such condition, or notice to-appellee of its danger?

We think the case of Kampmann v. Rothwell et al., 101 Tex. 535, 109 S.W. 1089, 17 L.R.A., N.S., 758, and the cases there referred to by Judge Brown, sustain the-above proposition.

In that case Mrs. Kampmann owned a home in San Antonio situated on a public street in the City. Fitsgerald & Basille,. independent contractors, contracted with her to repair a break in the sidewalk, and did so. They repaired it by taking out a section of the sidewalk and replaced it with fresh cement and concrete, and in order to protect it from injury by persons-walking over it, laid planks lengthwise upon it. There was no guard rail or other protection or light. Rothwell, while passing along at night, fell over the ends of: [441]*441the plank and was injured and sued Mrs. Kampmann for damages.

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Bluebook (online)
143 S.W.2d 438, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-paso-electric-co-v-buck-texapp-1940.