El Paso Electric Co. v. Sawyer

291 S.W. 667
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 27, 1927
DocketNo. 1940.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 291 S.W. 667 (El Paso Electric Co. v. Sawyer) 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. Sawyer, 291 S.W. 667 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

PELPHREY, C. J.

The record in this case is lengthy. The evidence in some respects technical and the facts more complicated than is usual in suits of this nature.

The briefs of counsel for the respective parties are models of clearness, brevity, accuracy, and sufficiency of statement. Excluding the assignment of error copied in the back, appellant’s brief covers 33 printed pages; appellee’s covers 8 typewritten pages. The brevity thereof has not in anywise detracted from the force and ability with which counsel have presented their respective. theories.

This opinion will be almost wholly confined to quotations from .the briefs.

Appellant’s statement of the nature and result of the suit is adopted as follows:

“This action was instituted in the district court by Ethel Sawyer, in her own behalf and in that of Orville Sawyer, a minor, against El Paso Electric Company, for damages sustained by reason of the death of Arthur P. Sawyer, the husband and father, respectively, of Ethel and Orville Sawyer.
“Arthur P. Sawyer was. an electrician, employed by the defendant, and at the time of his death was on one of defendant’s power line poles engaged in the work of a lineman installing and adjusting, electrical apparatus. The deceased came to his death from an electric shock or shocks. Working with him at the time was another lineman and coemployee, one Joseph W. Watson. Both of these men were experienced linemen and electricians.
“Sawyer and Watson having been required to make certain alterations in the electrical apparatus upon the pole, it became the duty of Sawyer, a new transformer having been installed upon the pole some 12 feet above the ground by Watson and himself, to connect this transformer with a cut-out box already on the pole and which before the installation of the new transformer had been connected in the usual manner by ¿n insulated copper wire known as a primary lead, with the old transformer which had been removed. When the old transformer was removed the primary lead which connected it with the cut-out box was left with one end securely fastened in the cut-out box, the other end dangling. The new transformer when installed upon the pole had already attached to it a new primary lead properly insulated to bfe inserted in the slot in the cut-out box and there secured by a set screw in lieu of the old wire, which was dangling from the cut-out box. The set screw in the cut-out box should have been loosened, the old copper wire entirely removed, and then the end of the new primary lead from the new transformer to the cut-out box inserted and secured by the set screw.
“It was the deceased Sawyer’s duty to do this particular piece of work, but instead of first removing the old wire from the slot in the cutout box and inserting the end of the new primary lead and fastening it with the set screw, he left the old wire dangling from the slot, inserted the new wire in the slot by its side, and, having set the set screw, left it in that condition. Both the old wire and the new were covered with insulation except on the ends where the insulation had been removed for the purpose of inserting the ends into the transformer and cut-out box. The old wire was bare at both ends — that is to say, the end which was inserted into the slot in the cut-out box and the end left dangling. The loose end extended from the slot about a foot and a half.
“After having done this piece of work Sawyer moved from the westerly, where he had just been working, to the easterly side of the pole, for the purpose of doing some other part of the work or to make room for Watson, and was standing there when his fellow servant Watson, having gotten upon the pole, discovered the old wire dangling. Watson at once called Sawyer’s attention to it and asked him why he had left it in that shape. S&wyer replied: ‘That was one that got away from me.’ While Saw *670 yer was standing on one of the cross-arms and looking down at Watson, Watson clipped the dangling wire as close as he could to the slot in the cut-out box. The dangling wire could have been entirely removed by loosening the set sqrew and readjusting it. Watson, having clipped the wire, put the plug there for that purpose in the cut-out box, thus making the connection and charging the primary lead and other wires, including the small piece of copper wire left in the slot; Watson at the same time called to another workman that the power or current was on, and Sawyer was aware of this fact. Sawyer and Watson were doing the work together. Sawyer should not have left the wire dangling from the cut-out box, but should himself have removed ^'altogether.
“After Watson had clipped the dangling wire close up to the cut-out box, Sawyer came again to the westerly side where Watson had been and took up his position with his feet on one of the cross-arms and began scraping with his knife the insulation, from a secondary wire about level with his head or a little higher, when he brought, a knee or some part of his leg into' contact with the cut-out -box, and presumably with the exposed end of the clipped copper wire in the slot. This caused him to receive one, if not two, successive shocks, and threw him backward in his belt, and his shoulders came into contact with a guy wire attached to the pole. When his shoulders touched the guy wire, though he had released his hold on the secondary wire, his knee or other part of his leg being still in cohtact with the clipped copper 'wire, he received one or more additional shocks, for the guy wire was in contact with a ground wire without a circuit breaker between this contact and the pole on which the deceased was standing.
“It was the duty of Sawyer to have removed the old wire from the slot. Had he removed it at the time he inserted the new primary lead he would not have been killed or injured. If Watson had removed the old wire from the slot instead of clipping it Sawyer would not have been killed or injured.
“The jury by s'pecial verdict found:
“(1) That Watson was guilty of negligence In inserting the plug in the cut-out box.
“(2) That this was a proximate cause of the death of Sawyer.
“(3) That the defendant was guilty of negligence in failing to place a circuit breaker in the guy wire in proximity to the pole upon which Sawyer was working at the time of the accident.
“(4) That this was a proximate cause of the death of Sawyer.
“(5) That the defendant was guilty of negligence in that the guy wire attached to the pole upon which the deceased was working was in contact with a grounded wire.
“(6) That this was a proximate cause of the death of Sawyer.
“Special Issue A. That the deceased Sawyer was negligent on the occasion in question when he met his death.
“Special Issue B. That this negligence was not the sole proximate cause of his death.

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Bluebook (online)
291 S.W. 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-paso-electric-co-v-sawyer-texapp-1927.