Guess v. Light, Gas & Water Division of Memphis

403 S.W.2d 115, 55 Tenn. App. 558, 1965 Tenn. App. LEXIS 266
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 25, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 403 S.W.2d 115 (Guess v. Light, Gas & Water Division of Memphis) 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
Guess v. Light, Gas & Water Division of Memphis, 403 S.W.2d 115, 55 Tenn. App. 558, 1965 Tenn. App. LEXIS 266 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinions

CARNET, J.

The plaintiffs below, George W. Guess, aged 43, and his co-worker, Charles Edward Paseur, [560]*560aged 35, were severely injured and burned on February 12,1962, when an aluminum ladder which they had lifted preparatory to getting on top of a newly constructed gymnasium at Watkins Overton High School in Memphis, Tennessee, allegedly came in contact with an uninsulated high voltage transmission line maintained by the defendant. Both Mr. Guess and Mr. Paseur brought suit for damages against the defendant, Memphis Light, Gas & Water Division. The eases were tried together. The principal defense was that the high tension lines were placed higher above the ground and farther away from the newly constructed gymnasium than required by the National Electrical Safety Code and that the defendant was not and could not be guilty of negligence insofar as the plaintiffs’ claims for damages were concerned. His Honor the Trial Judge agreed and sustained a motion for directed verdict in each case at the conclusion of all the proof.

Both plaintiffs appealed in error to this court. The causes were set for argument on March 11, 1965. The attorney for plaintiff George Guess appeared and made oral argument. Attorney for plaintiff Paseur filed assignments of error and brief but did not appear for the oral argument. He intended to adopt the oral argument made by attorney for the plaintiff George Guess. Such announcement, if made, escaped the attention of the court.

The assignments of error and brief in behalf of plaintiff Paseur became separated from the transcript of the record and briefs and arguments in behalf of plaintiff George Guess. The Guess case was assigned to this member of the court for the preparation of the opinion.We erroneously assumed that there was only one case before [561]*561the court for consideration, namely the case of the plaintiff, George Guess, vs. the Light, Gas & Water Division. An opinion was prepared by this member of the court and announced of date May 11, 1965, reversing the action of the Trial Judge and remanding the case of George Guess against the Memphis Light, Gas & Water Division for a new trial. The opinion also erroneously stated that the case of Paseur vs. Memphis Light, Gas & Water Division was not before the court for consideration at that time.

When our error regarding the case of plaintiff Paseur became known attorneys for defendant requested further argument upon the assignments of error of plaintiff Paseur. This request was granted. By consent entry of decree in conformity with the opinion of this court in the ease of George Guess vs. Memphis Light, Gas & Water Division announced of date May 11, 1965, was withheld pending argument of the case of Paseur vs. Light, Gas & Water Division. Argument in the case of Paseur vs. Memphis Light, Gas & Water Division by attorneys for plaintiff Paseur and defendant Light, Gas & Water Division was held before this court on Tuesday, May 25,1965. We now have the case for disposition.

Prior to April 11, 1961, defendant’s high voltage lines were directly across the area upon which the gymnasium for the Watkins Overton High School was to be built. At the request of the Board of Education of the City of Memphis the lines were moved. Three lines carrying approximately 12,500 volts of electricity between phases were installed on an 8-foot cross arm along the north side of Mallory Avenue and parallel with the south wall of the gymnasium. The power line closest to the south wall of the gymnasium was 29% feet away and about [562]*56227 feet above tlie ground. Mr. Mayer, Overhead Design Engineer for defendant, stated that the voltage from wire to ground would be 7200 volts.

East of the east wall of the gymnasium the Light, Gas & Water Division ran three additional high voltage lines carrying approximately 12,500 volts north and south and almost parallel with the east wall of the gymnasium. The westernmost of the three wires running north and south was 23% feet from the southeast corner of the gymnasium and 26 feet from the northeast corner of the gymnasium. The aluminum ladder being lifted by plaintiffs came in contact with or too close to the westernmost wire at a point near the southeast corner of the gymnasium. The top of the east wall of the gymnasium was 25 to 30 feet high. The high tension wire at the point of contact with the ladder was 25% feet above the ground. Three feet under the high tension wires were an electric wire carrying a fire alarm circuit and also a telephone cable. These wires were insulated and were not the property or under the control of the Light, Gas & Water Division. They are not involved in this lawsuit.

The National Electrical Safety Code is published by the National Bureau of Standards, Department of Commerce of the United States. It prescribes minimum safety standards for construction of electrical power lines and installations and is used generally by utility companies throughout the United States. The power line by which plaintiff was almost killed in the present case was placed 23% feet away from the building under construction whereas the National Electrical Safety Code prescribes a minimum of 8 feet separation between high voltage lines and a “building.” The National Electrical Safety Code provides a minimum clearance of 15 feet [563]*563above the ground for high voltage wires whereas the voltage wires in the present case were a minimum of 25% feet above the ground. The National Electrical Safety Code does not differentiate between a building under construction and a building being torn down or a building that has already been constructed. The Code provides only for a minimum clearance of 8 feet between the “building” and the high voltage line.

The plaintiff, George W. Guess, had been employed as a painter practically all of his adult life except for time spent in the army. In April, 1959, he sustained an injury to his left leg or ankle when he fell about 40 feet from a chair while painting the steeple of Calvary Episcopal Church in Memphis. Apparently a rope broke causing him to fall.

At the time of his injuries in the present case at Watkins Overton High School Gymnasium plaintiff Guess was employed by his brother who had the painting subcontract on the gymnasium job. On the day of the accident the superintendent of construction told plaintiff Guess and co-worker Paseur, also a painter, to prime in a metal strip which ran around the top of the gymnasium wall. Plaintiff and his co-worker, Paseur, had been using rolling steel scaffolds and painting inside 25 to 30 feet off the floor.

To prime the metal strip it was necessay for the plaintiff and his co-worker, Paseur, to get up on the top or very near the top of the gymnasium wall. There were no wooden ladders long enough to get them on the roof. The plaintiffs found an extension ladder made of aluminum. The wall was 25 to 30 feet high. The plaintiff and his co-worker, Paseur, extended the aluminum ladder to a length of 37 feet on the ground. At this time they were [564]*564standing several feet east of the southeast corner of the gymnasium. They explained that the ladder had to he extended on the ground and then placed on the wall of the gymnasium rather than placing the ladder against the wall and then extending it up against the wall because the superintendent of construction would object to defacing the newly constructed wall by the marks of the ladder being extended up the wall.

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Bluebook (online)
403 S.W.2d 115, 55 Tenn. App. 558, 1965 Tenn. App. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guess-v-light-gas-water-division-of-memphis-tennctapp-1965.