Gulf States Utilities Co. v. Moore

73 S.W.2d 941, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 753
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 9, 1934
DocketNo. 2455.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 73 S.W.2d 941 (Gulf States Utilities Co. v. Moore) 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 Utilities Co. v. Moore, 73 S.W.2d 941, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 753 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

COMBS, Justice.

Henry T. Moore was killed as a result 'of coming in contact with an electrically charged *943 telephone wire while in the employ of the appellant near Liberty, Tex., on May 22, 1930. The appellant, a private corporation, did not carry workmen’s compensation insurance on its employees, although it was eligible to carry such insurance, and this suit was filed in the Fifty-Eighth district court of Jefferson county by Mrs. Edith Moore, surviving wife of Henry T. Moore, as a common-law action to recover damages in the sum of $75,000, plus an additional $2,000 alleged to have been spent for hospital, medical, and burial expenses.

A trial to a jury on special issues resulted in findings convicting the appellant of negligence in several respects proximately causing the death of the deteased, and judgment was entered thereon in favor of appellee for $40,-611the jury having fixed appellee’s damages on the general issue at $40,000 and found on another issue that $611 was expended by her for funeral expenses and hospital bill. This is the second appeal of this ease. Gulf States Utilities Co. v. Moore (Tex. Civ. App.) 47 S.W.(2d) 488.

No point is made as to the sufficiency of the pleadings to support the issues submitted, and it is unnecessary for us to summarize the pleadings. The evidence is unusually free of conflict The facts so far as material to the issues involved are substantially as follows:

The deceased, Henry T. Moore, on the occasion of the accident was one of a crew of twelve men employed by the defendant working on a high line. At the time of the accident the crew, including the deceased, was engaged in constructing and putting braces and guy wires on an “H” formation pole, the formation consisting of two poles some 75 feet in height set a few feet apart, with cross-arms connecting them and extending out on either side for a short distance. These cross-’ arms, which were near the top of the poles, carried a number of high-voltage electric transmission lines; beneath them and about 35 to 37 feet from the ground was a shorter cross-arm on one of the poles, • carrying the telephone wire which caused the death of the deceased. •

The work on this formation, it seems, required several days, as the crew had been working on it some three or four days at the time of the accident. In working on the cross-arms it was necessary for the linemen, including the deceased, to climb up the poles by the aid of climbing tools or spurs, to the cross-arms near the top. For the purpose of sending up supplies needed in the work from time to time a supply line, consisting of a one-half inch rope, which operated by means of a pulley attached to one of the outer ends of the cross-arm, was strung up from the ground and by means of it a workman on-the ground drew the supplies up to the workmen. This supply line was outside of the pole on which the telephone line was strung, and near enough to the telephone line that articles being drawn up could swing over and strike against it.

In reaching and descending from his work on the cross-arms it was necessary for the deceased and other linemen to climb up and down the pole which carried the telephone line and just outside of which the supply line was operated. When work began on the “H” formation the telephone wire was strung on the outside of the formation. This telephone line carried something like 750 volts of electricity, or, to use the words of the witnesses, it was “hot.” Members of the crew, including the deceased, and the foreman, McMillan, knew this. So, at the beginning of the work, McMillan directed .that rubber insulators, or rubber “guts,”- as they are referred to in the record, be placed on the telephone line to prevent the workmen coming in contact with il. These rubber insulators were two in number, each three or four feet in length and were on the order of a piece of garden hose split open and placed over the wire “hot dog fashion.” The two pieces were pushed together at the cross-arm and extended either way from the place where the wire was fastened to its support. These insulators were put on by Joe Prejean, one of the linemen.

As above mentioned, when the work began and when the rubber insulators were put on, the telephone wire was on the outside of the “H” formation, but after the work began and a day or two before the accident the deceased and Oscar Farquhar, another lineman, by direction of McMillan, the foreman, cut the telephone line and brought it inside of the “H” formation and tied it back together. This was to get it out of the way of the linemen who, it seems, climbed up and down the outside of the pole in reaching and descending from the place of work on the cross-arms above.. In cutting the wire and putting it inside the formation, deceased and Farquhar handled it “hot,” using rubber gloves. The insulators were left in place. After being placed inside of the formation the telephone wire was 6 to 8 inches from the inside of the pole and the outside of the pole was left clear for the workmen to climb up and down. This they did by means of the climbing tools, their hands being extended around the pole. Such *944 was the general situation at the time of the accident complained of.

On the occasion in. question, while descending from his work at quitting time, Moore’s right hand came in contact with the charged telephone wire and he was killed.

The death of Moore and the events immediately preceding it are thus described by plaintiff’s witness, Ted Fisher, one of the members of the crew: We shall, for the sake of brevity, summarize his evidence on these matters. Fisher had been working with the crew some four or five months and was a helper. It seems that his work did not re-(fuire him to climb up the poles. He stayed on the ground and was the member of the crew whc handled the supply line and drew the material up to the linemen who worked on the cross-arms. At about 5:30 in the afternoon .the foreman, Mr. McMillan, hollered, “Time out.!’ Quitting time was 6 o’clock and it would take the workmen about 20 to 30 minutes to .get back to the plant, out of which they were working. At the time the foreman thus announced it was time to quit for the day, four linemen, including the deceased, were at work on the cross-arms near the top of the “H” formation. Three of the linemen came down ahead of Moore, who was the last to start down. No witness seems to have seen Moore at the moment he came in contact with the wire: Fisher narrates the events from this point on as follows:

“Naturally when one starts the others will come until they get to the ground. Moore was the last. When the two first ones hit the ground they pulled off their tools and throwed them in the truck and we had a special box for tools.

“Q. Now that was their climbing tools you have reference to? A. Yes sir. Then Cooper, the next to the last one down, had his tools on and. talking to Ed McMillan, the foreman, with the other fellows; we done had everything on the truck ready to go when he came down. . I looked up and seen him (Moore) coming, that is he had started down the pole —and so he hadn’t much more than time to take a few steps when I heard him holler and looked up and he was frozen to the pole. One hand to the pole and one to the wire. ⅞ * * The foreman gave instructions to get him off. Cooper was the only man had on tools so he went up. The other fellows tried to get-on their tools but they, had them all mixed up.

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.W.2d 941, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-states-utilities-co-v-moore-texapp-1934.