Mason-Dixon Lines, Inc. v. Lett

297 S.W.2d 93, 201 Tenn. 171, 5 McCanless 171, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 480
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 297 S.W.2d 93 (Mason-Dixon Lines, Inc. v. Lett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mason-Dixon Lines, Inc. v. Lett, 297 S.W.2d 93, 201 Tenn. 171, 5 McCanless 171, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 480 (Tenn. 1956).

Opinion

*173 Me. Justice TomliNSON

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The widow was allowed workman’s compensation on a finding by the Circuit Judge that the death of her husband, C. V. Lett, arose out of and in the course of his employment by The Mason-Dixon Lines, Inc. In so doing, the Judge rejected the insistences of Mason-Dixon that deceased (1) was not working for it at the time of his death, but if so, (2) he was an (a) independent contractor, or (b) casual employee, (3) employed as a farm laborer, and (4) met his death hy reason of an act of God. These insistences are renewed in support of its appeal.

Since this Court may not disturb the fact findings of the trial court in a workmen’s compensation case when supported hy substantial evidence, no attention need be given to the' fact that certain substantial evidence in support of the findings is contradicted in some respects hy evidence offered in behalf of Mason-Dixon.

Mason-Dixon operates truck commercially. It likewise maintains what seems to be a commercial pleasure resort, consisting of a clubhouse, lake, boat dock, boats, in the setting of a lawn and appropriate' shrubbery, etc., and around which it maintains a fence.

Adjoining the resort, Mason-Dixon has some thirty (30) acres of land which, during 1954, wa£ put to the use of growing certain agricultural products with the oper *174 ator thereof being the deceased, C. V. Lett on a sharecrop basis.

In connection with the operation and maintenance of this pleasure resort, and especially for the watering of its lawn and shrubbery, and for use in watering growing crops on the land allocated to agriculture, Mason-Dixon maintained a pump and connecting aluminum pipes running here and there from its lake over both the land devoted to (1) agriculture, and (2) the pleasure resort. The pipes were movable from place to place on all the premises mentioned. Water was forced by this pump through these pipes onto such of the premises as the pipes might be at a particular time. The maximum unit for watering at one time was seven (7) acres.

Deceased was employed by Mason-Dixon to work at this resort when not engaged in his crops, and was paid $1 per hour for his services. Apparently, he was allowed to keep his own time, when a foreman was not there. He took care of the lawn, boat houses, swimming pool, fencing, etc. The record discloses that he worked consistently a number of weeks prior to May 6, 1954. Thereafter, he did no more work until July 2, the day of his death, being engaged in his crops during this interim.

On the day of his death a foreman for Mason-Dixon directed him to irrigate, and do some fencing. In order to lay the pipes for such irrigation the foreman sent over four other Mason-Dixon employees, including the son of the deceased. These workmen, with the exception of the son, left after the pipes were laid. A number of hours are required for the proper watering of each unit.

When the deceased came home from his work for the mid-day meal he was “up” with his crops. After eating, he returned to the premises of Mason-Dixon to do this *175 fencing, etc. He carried along a hammer, staple pnller, staples and a carpenter’s apron. He did some fencing or repairing thereof. During this time the pnmp was in operation, watering at the same time the lawn and one of the crops.

With matters in the status related, the deceased, as best we can interpret this record, “went to the lake where he watered the” saddle horses of Mason-Dixon. Then it was “there come up this storm and he (the deceased) went down to cut it (the pump) off”. The witness, this son, was 300 to 400 yeards away from the pump screwing the spigot off the hose through which water was being pumped when there occurred a flash of lightning, which shocked the witness whose hand was in contact with the spigot.

The dead body of the deceased was on the ground by the pump, and the print of his hand, that is, the outer skin thereof was burned on the pump. His body was burned here and there.

The only conclusion permissible from the record is that Lett met his death by this stroke of lightning because his hand was on the pump which, we may infer, was made of iron or steel, he being in the act of cutting off the pump.

The evidence permits the Trial Court’s finding that this accident arose out of and in the course of his employment that day by Mason-Dixon. He had been ordered by his foreman to fence and irrigate, and that is one of the chores he was performing. The foreman who gave this order concedes the obligation of Mason-Dixon to pay him for what he did that afternoon. It was proper that he cut the pump off, and this, as a part of that which he was told to do, or, at least, it may be so inferred from *176 the'evidence. But, says Mason-Dixon, this death was the result of an act of God, to-wit, the lightning.

In Jackson v. Clark & Fay, Inc., 197 Tenn. 135, 141, 270 S.W.2d 389, this Court noted that acts of God are compensable under the statute when the employee, by reason of his duties, is exposed to a peculiar danger from such act; that is, one greater than persons generally in the community. The rule seems to be' general, and is well' established. The difficulty is in determining when it' is applicable. Among the texts and authorities where there- are collected decisions on this point in cases arising from lightning strokes are Volumes 13, 40 and 46 A.L.R., respectively, at pages 977, 401, and 1218, respectively.

It is manifest from a reading of the annotations in the references that the Courts had difficulty fréquently in reaching a decision. But there is to be gathered from an overall appraisal of the decisions the thought that the judgment of the lower Court allowing compensation is not disturbed where there is substantial evidence to support a conclusion “that there springs from the. employment in which the workman was engaged a special risk of being struck by lightning”.

. In the New York case of Madura v. City of New York, 238 N.Y. 214, 144 N.E. 505, 506, the action of the trial tribunal in making an award was sustained on the ground that: — “It is a matter of widespread scientific belief and declaration. that a wet tree is a ready conductor of a current of electricity, and that a person standing under such a tree is exposed to a degree of danger which does not confront one in the open spaces of a highway or field.” And the New York Court in Emmick v. Hanrahcm Brick and loe Co., 206 App. Div, 580, 201 N.Y.S. 637, 638, affirmed an award upon evidence *177 that the employee was struck while working upon a shed which had “a twisted wire cable, which was looped around the rafters * * * and passed therefrom” within a short distance of where the employee was working. In the Texas case of United States Fidelity and G. Co. v. Rochester, Tex. Civ. App., 281 S.W.

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Bluebook (online)
297 S.W.2d 93, 201 Tenn. 171, 5 McCanless 171, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-dixon-lines-inc-v-lett-tenn-1956.