McKinney Ice, Light & Coal Co. v. Montgomery

176 S.W. 767, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 565
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 24, 1915
DocketNo. 7248.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 176 S.W. 767 (McKinney Ice, Light & Coal Co. v. Montgomery) 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
McKinney Ice, Light & Coal Co. v. Montgomery, 176 S.W. 767, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 565 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

RASBURX, J.

The appellee on September 12, 1912, while in the act of turning off the electric current from a light in his bathroom, was seriously burned and shocked as the result of a heavy charge of electricity passing into his body. The light was what is termed •a droplight, and consisted of a brass-receiving socket and globe attached to an insulated cord suspended from the ceiling. When ap-pellee seized the light to turn it off, the current was so great he was unable to release it. In his struggles his thigh came in contact with a lavatory in the bathroom, which appears to have increased the current, for, in addition to burning his thigh seriously, he soon lost consciousness and fell to the floor. Appellee thereafter sued appellants, the McKinney Ice, Light & Coal Company and the city of McKinney, hereafter designated, respectively, as light company and city, both at the time appellee was injured maintaining and operating an electric light plant in McKinney, the former company furnishing all •character of electric service to those that wanted it, likewise the latter, which in addition lighted its streets. Appellee alleged that he was injured as the result of the negligence of both appellants. Each appellant denied negligence and filed cross-bills against the other, urging, in effect, that, if appellee was injured, it was due to the sole negligence of its codefendant, against which contribution was sought. There was a jury trial resulting in verdict for appellee for $2,250 against appellants jointly, and a verdict finding against both appellants on their respective cross-bills. Judgment followed the verdict. Both appellants have appealed from the judgment in favor of appellee and from the judgment decreeing them jointly liable.

The pleadings of the parties properly raise all issues presented in the respective briefs, and for that reason we omit a detailed statement thereof. Nor will we attempt to collate the facts deducible from the evidence of the several parties, but content ourselves in that respect by reference thereto when considering the issues demanding it. It is necessary, however, in order to intelligently view the appeal, to say, in addition to what we have related above, that Tucker street in McKinney ranges east and west. The city has its poles and arc wires on the north side of Tucker street, and the light company has its poles and wires on the south side thereof. At a point on Tucker street, near where Hunt, street, a north and south street, intersects said Tucker street, a service wire belonging to the light company extends from the south side-of Tucker street across to the residence of H. Q. Smith, a customer on the north side. The lines of the light company at the intersection of Tucker and Hunt streets cross Hunt street, and then turn south on the east side thereof and enter the house a block or more away, where appellee was injured. The’ evidence was conflicting as to whether the arc wires were above the service wires or the service wires above the arc wires at the point where the wires of appellants crossed. When appellee received his injuries, in the manner we have stated, it was after night had fallen, and several theories were advanced in explanation of his injuries on trial, and it is urged on appeal that the evidence will sustain the verdict of the jury that the appellants were jointly negligent, or that the evidence will sustain the verdict against one of the appellants. Appellant city contends, however, that under the evidence no liability against it is shown at all, but of this feature of the case more an on.

[1, 2] It is first urged by the light company, the brief of which will be first considered, in effect, that the court erred in refusing to give its specially requested charges B and 3. These charges were separately requested, and the asserted error in refusing to allow them are presented in separate assignments, but, since they present the same question in a different form, they will be considered together. The effect of the requested charges was to tell the jury that if they should conclude from the evidence that, at the time appellee was injured, the arc wires of the city *769 came in contact with the limb or limbs of a tree, through which the evidence showed it passed, and that such contact caused the said arc wires to burn apart, or to break apart and fail upon the service wires of the light company and transmit to same an excessive voltage of electricity, which in turn entered the wires in the residence of appellee and caused his injuries, etc., and that so maintaining its wires in said tree was the sole proximate cause of appellee’s injuries, to return a verdict for said light company. The proposition asserted in connection with the refused charges is that the pleading and evidence raised the issue presented by the special charges, and hence appellant light company was entitled to have the issue presented affirmatively. The proposition, assuming for the discussion that the evidence raised the issue, is theoretically correct; but we conclude nevertheless that the court properly refused both charges, since the court told the jury substantially as much in the ninth paragraph of the general charge. St. Louis S. F. & T. Ry. Co. v. Overturf, 163 S. W. 639, and cases cited. In the ease cited it was said:

“It has been repeatedly held and is now settled law that the defendant is entitled to have presented to the jury any specified group of facts developed upon trial, which, if true, would in law establish a given defense, provided, of course, that such requested charge is not substantially covered by the main charge or other allowed special charges.”

The ninth paragraph of the court’s general charge groups all the facts which would constitute sole liability on the part of appellant city, and directs the jury, among other matters, that:

“If you believe from the evidence that the wire of defendant city of McKinney was permitted to come in contact with one of the limbs of a tree then and there situate, and * * * that by reason of said wire coming in contact with said limb the wire in question melted or broke, and * * * was thereby caused to fall upon or come in contact with the wires of defendant McKinney Ice, Light & Coal Company, and * * * a heavy voltage of electric current was thereby conveyed into plaintiff’s bathroom,” etc., and “injured appellee as claimed, then, * * * if you so believe, you will find for plaintiff against the defendant city of McKinney, and assess his damages as hereinafter set forth.”

This portion of the court’s charge, it will he seen, groups the identical facts enumerated by appellant light company in .the requested charges, and tells the jury affirmatively, if they believe the recited facts to be true, to return verdict solely against appellant city of McKinney. Argument or illustration is not required to demonstrate that the facts set out in the requested charges were fairly grouped in the general charge. Then were they affirmatively presented? Clearly so, we believe, since the jury were told, if they believed the facts so grouped to he true, to find solely against appellant the city of McKinney. True, the charge did not say, as it might properly have done, and in favor of the appellant the light company. But no other result could have followed had the jury adopted the theory of the case thus presented.

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217 S.W. 765 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
176 S.W. 767, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinney-ice-light-coal-co-v-montgomery-texapp-1915.