Gulf States Telephone Co. v. Evetts

188 S.W. 289, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 892
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 10, 1916
DocketNo. 5631. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 188 S.W. 289 (Gulf States Telephone Co. v. Evetts) 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
Gulf States Telephone Co. v. Evetts, 188 S.W. 289, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 892 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

RICE, J.

This suit was brought by appel-lee against the Gulf States Telephone Company, a private corporation, hereafter called the Phone Company, and W. W. Deyerle, the owner and manager of the McGregor Electric Light Company, hereafter referred to as the Light Company, to recover damages sustained by him on the 17th of October, 1914, while in the employ of fhe former as a lineman, predicated on the alleged negligence of both of said companies. Prior to the accident, each of the companies had constructed a line of poles and wires over and along the principal streets of the town of McGregor in the. operation of their business, and, among others, along West Sixth and Jackson streets, the former running east and west and the latter north and south, and intersecting each other. The Phone Company’s poles were erected and its wires extended along the north side of West Sixth street, while the Light Company’s poles were set and its wires extended along the south side of that street. The Phone Company had stretched a guy wire from a pole on the north side of West Sixth street, diagonally southwest across said street to another pole standing near the intersection of Jackson and West Sixth streets, which guy wire ran below three and above one of the wires of the Light Company, with which it later came in contact. This guy wire was not insulated, and the insulation had worn off of the light wire for about 12 inches at such point of contact, thereby permitting electricity to escape from the light wire to the guy wire. On the day in question appellee was ordered by his foreman to climb the pole on the north side of West Sixth street, to investigate som'é trouble supposed to be about the cable above this wire, and, while passing the guy wire, which had become charged with 1,100 volts of electricity from the light wire, came in contact therewith, and received an electric shock, severely burning him and permanently injuring his left arm, rendering the same useless.

It is alleged that the Phone Company was negligent in stretching said guy wire through the electric light wires, and in such close proximity thereto as to permit them to come in contact with each other, and in not having the guy wire insulated near the poles to which it was attached, so that its employés would not be exposed to danger in the event of contact; that it was also negligent in directing appellee to climb said pole, with the knowledge that said wires were in contact, and in not warning him of the danger that he was about to encounter, and in permitting said wires to remain in contact with each •other, and in thus failing to furnish appel-lee with a reasonably safe place in which to work.

The grounds of negligence charged against the Light Company were: (1) In constructing and maintaining its wires so as to permit them to come and remain in contact with the guy wire of the Phone Company; (2) in not having said wires sufficiently insulated to prevent the escape of electricity therefrom; (3) negligence in permitting one of its poles to *291 lean at the top and thereby pull the light wire against the guy wire.

The Phone Company answered with specific denials of each of the acts of negligence charged against it; further set up that whatever injuries appellee suffered were inflicted by reason of the negligence of the Light Company, for which it was in no way responsible, and, further, that it was only a passive tort-feasor in the matter complained of, and that the Light Company was the primary and active tort-feasor — -praying that, in the event appellee should recover against it, it have judgment over against its codefendant therefor. It also pleaded contributory negligence and assumed risk, and set up in bar of appellee’s right to recover a release executed by him to it, wherein, for the sum of $50 cash paid and the assumption upon its part of all doctor and drug bills occasioned by his injuries, appellee released it from all claim for damages by reason of the injury.

The Light Company answered by general demurrer, express denials of the acts of negligence charged against it, and specially pleaded that its poles and wires were constructed long before the Phone Company’s poles and guy wire were placed and extended across said street, and therefore it could not have been negligent in regard thereto; that if the insulation on its wires was worn off at the point of contact, it was not occasioned by any negligence on its part, but on account of the negligence of the Phone Company, or some one else in no way connected with the Light Company. It further alleged that appellee himself had constructed the guy wire in the manner alleged while an employe of the Phone Company, and therefore he could not be heard to complain of the injuries received therefrom. It also alleged that at the time the guy wire was extended across the street through its wires, none of the insulation on the latter had been rubbed off, and if such insulation was ever thereafter rubbed off, it was by reason of the guy wire’s being so negligently constructed by appellee; alleging that appellee knew the condition of said wire at the time of his injury ; and, further, that the Phone Company was negligent in placing said guy wire between the electric light wires, which was the direct and proximate cause of the injuries sustained by appellee; and prayed for judgment 'over against the Phone Company, in the event any judgment should be rendered against it.

Appellee, in reply to the plea in bar, alleged that at the time of the execution of such release he was under the influence of medicine that greatly impaired his reasoning faculties, and rendered him incapable of appreciating the effect of the instrument signed, and the nature and extent of his injuries.

The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues, and judgment rendered for ap-pellee against both defendants jointly, based upon the findings of the jury, in the sum of $15,280.30, from which the Phone Company has appealed and the Light Company has sued out its writ of error.

The facts, briefly stated, show that the guy wire of he Phone Company was stretched through the light wires and in such close proximity thereto as rendered their contact not only possible, but probable; that it was not insulated, and was a good conductor of electricity; that for several months prior to the accident, the guy wire had been allowed to remain in contact with the light wire where it crossed same, at which place the insulation was worn off the light wire, which facts had been known to each of the managers of both companies for some time prior to the accident, and no steps had been taken by either to remedy such condition; that at the time of the accident the light wire was charged with 1,100 volts of electricity, which, by reason of such contact and lack of insulation, was transmitted to the guy wire.

The facts, also, we think, justify a finding that appellee, without knowledge of the fact that the guy wire was so charged with electricity, climbed the pole at the direction of his foreman for the purpose stated, and came in contact with such wire, from which he received the injuries complained of.

Opinion.

Separate briefs have been filed for both appellant and plaintiff in error, the former of which will be first considered.

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Bluebook (online)
188 S.W. 289, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 892, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-states-telephone-co-v-evetts-texapp-1916.