Nashville Railway & Light Co. v. Harrison

5 Tenn. App. 22, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 31
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 5, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 5 Tenn. App. 22 (Nashville Railway & Light Co. v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nashville Railway & Light Co. v. Harrison, 5 Tenn. App. 22, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 31 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

DeWITT, J.

The Nashville Railway & Light Company, a public service corporation, has appealed in the nature of a writ of error from a judgment rendered against it in each of these two cases, which were tried together before the circuit judge and jury. In the suit of W. Mj. Lantrip there was a verdict for $2000, but upon the motion for new trial the circuit judge suggested a remittitur of $500, which was accepted under protest, and judgment was rendered in his favor for $1500. W. M. Lantrip by writ of error and assignments of error has preserved his exceptions to the suggestion of remittitur. In the suit of W. H. Harrison et ah, Trustees, there was a verdict and judgment for $4000.

These two actions were based upon the same facts as constituting causes of action in favor of these plaintiffs. They were suits for damages for destruction of certain real and personal property by fire, alleged to be due to the negligence of one Welch, an employee of the Railway & Light Company, while engaged in the performance of his duty as a “trouble man,” upon being* called to remedy defects in the lighting system of the house occupied by said W. M. Lantrip, the pastor of the Woodbine M. E. Church south, and held by W. H. Harrison, et al. as trustees, as a parsonage for said pastor and con *25 gregation. The suit of the trustees was brought for the value of the house, and the suit brought by Reverend W. M. Lantrip, was brought for the value of his household goods and other personal property, destroyed by the fire. The fire occurred about seven o’clock in the evening of March 21, 1925.

The house was a seven room, two-story frame residence, about three and one-half years old. In the declaration as amended, it was charged that the plaintiff, W. M. Lantrip was a customer of the Railway & Light Company, that among its duties to its customers, was the employment and use of proper and safe electrical appliances, and the making of necessary changes and repairs on their electric light apparatus, on account of the dangerous quality of the electric current used; that on March 21,1925, some trouble or defect appeared in the wiring or apparatus of said residence; that defendant sent its agent or employee to repair the same; that he carelessly, negligently and in violation of defendant’s duty, contrary to good usage, and the exercise of reasonable care and caution in such business, on finding a short circuit in the wires carrying current into the residence, and which caused the fuse and connections to burn out, inserted pennies or copper coins, or fuse plugs of too great amperage, to-wit, plugs of 30 ampere capacity, for the conduction of the electric current, when the proper plug and plug of maximum capacity to be used was one not exceeding 15 amperes, thereby causing a dangerous, heavy and excessive amount or capacity of current to flow through said improper fuse connections to the inside wires of the residence, all the lights having first been switched on, causing the wires to heat and set fire to and burn said residence. Pleas of the general issue were interposed to these declarations.

In disposing of the assignments of error that there is no evidence to support the verdicts, and that the trial judge erred in overruling the motions made by the defendant for peremptory instructions, we must look to the record to ascertain whether or not there is any material evidence to support the findings of the jury, and must take as true the strongest legitimate view of that evidence supporting the verdicts, and disregard the countervailing testimony. In order to reverse the judgments and set aside the verdicts upon the facts, it would be necessary to determine that the evidence, wherever it is found in the record, affords no support for the findings of the jury. The verdicts in these eases rest upon circumstantial evidence, for no one saw the actual ignition of the property. However, it is well settled that negligence may be proved by circumstantial evidence. Walton v. Burchel, 121 Tenn., 715, 121 S. W., 391; 20 R. C. L., 180; 29 Cyc., 622.

On the evening in question it -appeared to MJr. Lantrip and his family that some defect existed in the lighting system, because the *26 lights would not shine or bum when turned on. Mr. Lantrip called the defendant Company and it sent Welch to examine the lighting system and make the necessary repairs. He arrived in about thirty minutes. He went to the fuse box on the back porch and ascertained that there was a short circuit. This was found to be in the drop light in the kitchen, due to a contact of the current wire with-the metallic easing of the light socket and decomposition of the rubber insulator. A short circuit operates to cause an ordinary fuse to blow out by reason of the excessive loading of current. The fuse is a safety device, a plug which is screwed into a socket in the fuse box in order to complete the connection between the service or feed wire leading into the house, and the branch wire leading to the light. Within the fuse where the contact is made there is a soft metal which when heated beyond a point of safety, will melt, break the connection, and thereby prevent the inside wire from becoming heated to such extent as to be dangerous to the building. The testimony of two expert witnesses shows that for a current of 110 volts, which was here used, and was the usual and customary current or voltage for wiring of a residence, the standard of safety required that all branch circuits of wiring in a residence should be protected by fuses of no greater capacity than 15 amperes; that a fuse of greater capacity than 15 amperes will let in to the branch wires a stronger current; that therefore it is unsafe to use a fuse plug of 30 amperes. A number fourteen wire, as were these wires in this house, can carry a current of 15 amperes, but no more with real safety. A fuse plug of 30 amperes will conduct so much current as to overheat the wires, and it might set something on fire. These are the standards set by the National Electric Code of the National Board of Underwriters, as standards of safety against destruction of property by overheated wires. It further appears that when a penny is used instead of fuse plugs, or is used as a means of metallic connection between a fuse plug and the end of the wire in the socket, its carrying amperage is even in excess of that of a plug of 30 amperes, on account of its high degree of conductibility. It further appears that it is unsafe to use “strapped” fuses, that is, fuses which have once been burned out but the brass metal on the sides of which has been turned over the ends so as to enable the metal to be a conductor at the end, instead of the soft metal which had previously melted.

The fire in question was discovered by a young son of Mr. Lantrip when he went upstairs to turn off a light in the hall just as Welch was leaving the premises upon the supposed completion of his duties. The boy saw a bright light under the door of the closet just to the right of the head of the steps. This was a small closet, the walls of which were of unfinished lumber. which was very dry. Along one of these walls of wood ran two wires halfway up, but there was a *27 socket but no light there. The closet contained nothing but a baby bed and a box of soiled clothes. The fire originated in this closet. The insulation of such wire is rubber and cotton braid on the outside of it. It will stand 15 amperes,'but no greater amperage without heating the wire.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Tenn. App. 22, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nashville-railway-light-co-v-harrison-tennctapp-1927.