Ischar v. West Texas Utilities Co.

54 S.W.2d 842
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 23, 1932
DocketNo. 7799.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 54 S.W.2d 842 (Ischar v. West Texas Utilities Co.) 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
Ischar v. West Texas Utilities Co., 54 S.W.2d 842 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

McClendon, c. j.

July 2, 1931, E. A. Ischar while attempting to operate an electric drill in his blacksmith shop at Ballinger, was killed by an electric current (the motive power of the drill), which was brought into the shop through the service wires of the West Texas Utilities Company. This suit was brought against the latter, for compensatory damages for Isobar’s death, by his mother, widow, and children, who have appealed from an adverse judgment upon a .special issue verdict.

The drill which was connected with the light circuit, carrying normally from 110 to 125 volts (commonly called a 110-volt current) was defective in that there was a “short” in its wiring which resulted at times in the user’s receiving a shock. The suit was predicated upon the hypothesis that the voltage of the current which killed Ischar was largely in excess of the normal, due to the utilities company’s negligence. The jury found that the current which killed Ischar was not in excess of the usual and normal.

The only evidence of an excessive voltage was the physical effect of the current in producing Isehar’s death and two burns upon his body, and in causing severe shocks to two other persons who came in contact with his body before the current was cut off. It was the theory of appellants that these results could not have been produced by the normal voltage under the conditions in evidence.

The appeal presents but two rulings of the trial court for review. These relate to the exclusion of the following evidence offered by appellants: (1) The rules of the utilities company furnished its employees for their guidance in guarding against injury while dealing with charged electric wires; and (2j evidence to the effect that appellee sold for use in private residences cook stoves operated with a three-phase current of 220 to 235 volts (commonly called 220 volts).

We overrule assignments complaining of excluding the latter evidence on two grounds: (1) We think the evidence was entirely void of any probative force. (2) There was other evidence in the record to the effect that cook stoves requiring the 220-volt three-phase circuit were in common use in private families, and that motors requiring the same, voltage were in common use in small industrial plants. There was in fact no controversy in this regard. Whatever inferences might, therefore, be properly drawn from the excluded evidence were as readily deducible from other uncontroverted evidence before the jury. The trial court’s ruling in this regard was therefore harmless.

The rules were offered as tending to prove by way of admission that the 110-volt current would not produce death, and in impeachment of appellee’s witnesses who testified to the contrary.

Those portions of the rules offered and excluded follow:

“Rules for the Safety of Employees.
“Sec. 240. Special Rules for Live Line Maintenance.
“(a) All live wires or apparatus having a Voltage of 5,000 or less may be handled or worked on while energized, but such wires or apparatus carrying a voltage between 300 and 5,000 Alternating Current shall not be touched or worked on without wearing rubber gloves and using all other protective devices necessary for safety. ' Lines or apparatus carrying in excess of 250 volts Direct Current shall not be worked on without the use of protective devices, except when the work can be done without danger of contact with ground or other line. * * * .
“Section 192. Protective Devices.
“(a) The company supplies rubber gloves for all work requiring them. It is positively required that all live wires or apparatus carrying a voltage between 300 and 5,000 volts between phases be handled with rubber gloves.” * * *
“195. Handling Fuses or Brushes:
“In handling fuses on circuits of more than 300 volts employees shall use rubber gloves and insulated rods or tongs and where provided stand on insulated platforms or mats. The body shall be kept as distant and as far below apparatus being worked upon as possible. Brushes on live equipment shall be handled only when necessary and then with due precautions. All fuse boxes or other fuse receptacles shall be properly fused at all times, (no open fuse or copper links will be *844 permitted). Before replacing fuses on circuits above 300 volts the circuit shall be disconnected, or the fuse shall be handled by insulated tools, rubber gloves or portable apparatus which should be provided. Insulated tongs shall be used for handling all live potential transformer fuses of 2,000 volts and over.” * * ⅜
“(c) 181. For protection to the operator where parts of more than 300 volts to ground are not otherwise guarded or isolated by elevations, there shall be provided suitable insulating floors, mats or platforms with good footing and they shall be so placed that the operator cannot readily touch live parts, unless standing on such mats or platforms.
“216. (e) Ground wires and ground connections shall be inspected periodically, and ground connections on distribution systems shall, when installed, be tested for resistance unless multiple grounding to water piping is used and a permanent record of these tests kept. * * * ”

The gist of appellee’s counterproposition may be reduced to the following:

(1) The rules were at most only an opinion of appellee and were therefore not admissible against it.

(2) Not being the expression of any of the witnesses the rules could not be offered to impeach their testimony.

(3) The evidence conclusively shows that there was no excess current on the circuit.

(4) That Ischar met his death from a normal current is as reasonable an hypothesis from the evidence as that the current was abnormally excessive, and since there was no direct evidence of excessive voltage, a directed verdict for appellee would have been proper.

r~ (5) Ischar was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law In using a drill \jvhich he knew to be defective.

⅛ The rules could only be admissible as primary evidence, upon the issue whether the 110-volt current was capable: of producing death when directly applied under favorable circumstances. We agree with appellee that upon that issue they constituted only it&.opin- \yion that such voltage would not produce death. The cases cited by appellee [Negociacion, etc., v. Love (Tex. Civ. App.) 220 S. W. 224; Williams v. Fuerstenberg (Tex. Civ. App.) 12 S.W.(2d) 812; Baker v. Keet Rountree Dry Goods Co., 318 Mo. 969, 2 S.W.(2d) 733, 3 S.W.(2d) 1003; Texas Employers’ Ins. Ass’n v. Sewell (Tex. Civ. App.) 32 S.W.(2d) 262] are to the effect that a previous expression of opinion is not admissible as an ad: mission against interest. In these cases, however, tEe~faetún--issue was of such character that proof of its existence rested in actual knowledge and not in the opinion of the'witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
54 S.W.2d 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ischar-v-west-texas-utilities-co-texapp-1932.