Hatley v. MOBIL PIPE LINE COMPANY

1973 OK 42, 512 P.2d 182
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 10, 1973
Docket44274
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1973 OK 42 (Hatley v. MOBIL PIPE LINE COMPANY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hatley v. MOBIL PIPE LINE COMPANY, 1973 OK 42, 512 P.2d 182 (Okla. 1973).

Opinion

BARNES, Justice:

This appeal involves an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by a lineman in dismantling a telephone line on an easement owned by Mobil Pipe Line Company, hereinafter referred to as “Mod-bil” or “defendant”. Mobil’s said easement traversed a distance of some 90 miles between Oklahoma City and this State’s Drumright-Yale area. On it, Mobil installed its private telephone system many years ago and thereafter used the system in connection with its pipe line operations. Later, when the Turner Turnpike was constructed more than twenty years ago, portions of the telepone line’s route had to be modified or relocated to cross that highway.

By 1968, Mobil no longer used the system and decided the line should be dismantled. To accomplish this, it entered into a contract, called a “Bill of Sale”, with one K. Mjolhus, d/b/a Panhandle Crane Service, of Amarillo, Texas, hereinafter referred to as “Pan Crane”. In the contract, Mobil agreed to sell Pan Crane certain personal property comprising the telephone system on its said easement, including the telephone poles and certain numbers of pounds of various kinds of telephone wire, estimated to be strung on the poles, at a certain price per pound for the #8 copper wire in the line. To pay this consideration, Pan Crane deposited more than $31,000.00 with Mobil, and, under the contract, the total price Pan Crane finally paid Mobil was to be computed (“settled”) on the basis of the total weight of the wire removed.

As a part of the consideration, Pan Crane agreed to dismantle the line and remove both telephone wires and poles from Mobil’s easement premises, and to then *184 “clean up the premises . . . ” to Mobil’s “satisfaction”, all at Pan Crane’s expense.

The contract also subjected Pan Crane to damages in the event the work was not completed within a specified time, and it provided that Mobil would have “an Inspector available' who will point out the wires, telephone poles, and other appurtenances that are to be dismantled and removed . . .

The contract specifically provided that Pan Crane would furnish all the labor and equipment necessary for the job, that it would comply with all of Mobil’s insurance requirements before any dismantling or removing from the easement premises occurred, and that it would hold Mobil harmless from and' against all claims of every kind and character by third parties, including Pan Crane’s employees, on account of personal injuries or death. The contract also recited that Pan Crane had inspected “all of the personal property hereby sold and conveyed and accepts title (to it) in its present condition and at its present location.” The same paragraph of the contract also recited that Mobil “excludes and disclaims any implied warranty of merchantability and warranty as to the condition or serviceability of said personal property.”

About three weeks after Pan Crane had started its performance of the above contract near Northeast 23rd Street in Oklahoma City, the dismantling of the telephone line and removal of its poles had progressed in a northeasterly direction to a point on Mobil’s easement between Chandler and Stroud, where the line crosses over the Turner Turnpike on telephone poles standing on both sides (north and south) of this highway. By a plan that was devised to minimize the obstruction of Turner Turnpike traffic from falling wires, two of Pan Crane’s linemen were to ascend the pole along the north side of the Turnpike (hereinafter referred to as the “north pole”) and the pole along the south side of the Turnpike, and, at a given signal, cut each wire extending over the road between the two poles at the same time; and, when the wire fell to the ground, one man standing in the Turnpike’s median would cut it in two pieces; then others stationed on either side of the road’s traffic lanes would quickly pull each cut piece north and south, respectively, out of the way of the Turnpike traffic.

The Appellant, Albert O. Hatley, hereinafter called “plaintiff”, was the lineman assigned to climb and cut the wire from the north pole, and Orin Reeser, whose title with Mobil was that of “Division Lineman” and who had stationed himself in the Turnpike’s median, was to cut the wires in two when they fell to the ground, so that Pan Crane’s employees could more quickly pull the two cut pieces off of the road. As far as appears from the record, the only task Reeser had to perform for Mobil on the project was to assist a Mr. Frank Lancaster, who Mobil had sent from its Dallas headquarters to be its “Inspector” under the above described contract with Pan Crane. According to Reeser’s testimony, he and Lancaster were there to see that the copper wire was all taken down and accounted for and that, when the telephone poles were pulled out of the ground, the holes in the easement premises were filled up.

After plaintiff had gaffed his way up the north pole, had looped his safety belt around the crossbar at the pole’s top, and he and the lineman on the south pole had simultaneously cut three of the wires connecting the two poles, without mishap, the last wire was cut. When this occurred, the north pole broke off about even with the surface of the ground, and fell to the ground in the same northeasterly direction that its guy wires pulled, carrying plaintiff with it. After the accident, it was found that the inside of that pole, where it broke off, was rotten.

Plaintiff thereafter instituted the present action to recover damages for the personal injuries he received in the fall, and named only Mobil and Reeser as defendants. His cause of action against them was based *185 upon their alleged negligence in the following particulars set forth in his petition:

“(a) Defendants were guilty of negligence by causing, suffering and permitting a trap, pitfall, danger, and snare to exist on their easement premises causing injuries and damages to the plaintiff.
“(b) Defendants invited plaintiff upon the premises and represented to plaintiff that the premises were safe when, in fact, they were dangerous, and failed to warn plaintiff that the pole was brittle, aged and defective.
“(c) Defendants were negligent in failing to inspect and discover the aforementioned hazardous condition which existed so as not to expose plaintiff to a dangerous condition maintained by them on the easement right-of-way.
“(d) Defendants were careless in failing to inspect at reasonable intervals the unsafe condition of the premises so as to discover and warn the plaintiff.
“(e) The defendants were negligent in causing, suffering and permitting the pole to become deteriorated and weakened, when they knew, or should have known by exercise of ordinary care, that the plaintiff might be reasonably expected to go upon the pole to dismantle the lines, and that the pole would fall causing plaintiff’s injuries.
“(f) Defendants were negligent in failing to remove the trap, pitfall and danger, having the prior ability to know that it was in that condition and was a hazard and danger to persons upon the premises.

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Bluebook (online)
1973 OK 42, 512 P.2d 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatley-v-mobil-pipe-line-company-okla-1973.