Nashville Railway & Light Co. v. Williams Ex Rel. Williams

11 Tenn. App. 1, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 14, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 Tenn. App. 1 (Nashville Railway & Light Co. v. Williams Ex Rel. Williams) 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. Williams Ex Rel. Williams, 11 Tenn. App. 1, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 69 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

CROWNOVER, J.

This is an action brought by Sarah Williams, a minor, by her next friend, to recover damages for personal injuries caused by the explosion of a dynamite cap averred to have been negligently left by the side of the Murfreesboro Pike near her home by the defendant Railway & Light Co. The declaration contained only one count, in which it was averred that Sarah was ten years of age and picked up the cap and, being unaware of its dangerous character, touched it with a lighted match, when it exploded and caused the injuries sued for. The defendant pleaded the general issue of not guilty, and the case was tried by the court and the jury, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for $2,000 in favor of the plaintiff below.

At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, and at the conclusion of all the evidence, the defendant moved for a directed verdict, which motions were overruled. The defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and it has appealed in error to this court and has assigned eight errors, which when summarized raise only three propositions, to the effect that the trial court erred:

(1) In overruling defendant’s motion for a direct verdict, because there was no material evidence to support a verdict.

(2) In refusing to charge the jury as requested.

(3) The verdict was excessive.

The facts of the case are, that in the summer of 1926 the State Highway Commission began preparations for constructing a new concrete surface on the Murfreesboro Pike, which necessitated the widening of said Pike which caused the Railway & Light Co., and Telephone Companies to move their poles back some distance. There is considerable rock formation in that section, which necessitated blasting for some of the post holes, requiring the use of dynamite and caps.

*3 The defendant Nashville Railway & Light Co., had poles and wires on the left side of the road, from Nashville to Murfreesboro, while the Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co., had poles and wires on the right side of the road, and the Lavergne Telephone Co., also had poles located on the right side. During the summer and fall of 1926 said Companies began to remove their poles, and the highway forces began the work of tearing up the pike and having the fences rebuilt along the sides of same. T. J. Williams had a combination filling station, barbecue stand and grocery store on the left side of said pike, but his residence was across the road on the right-hand side about thirteen miles from Nashville.

On August 10th, the Nashville Railroad & Light Co. placed a pole near said filling station. It was necessary to blast out the. hole for the same, and that company used a metallic dynamite cap about the size of a lead pencil one and one-half inches long, that had two small wires extending from one end, so that the cap could be exploded by the use of dry cell batteries; but the other end was entirely closed. The company did not use fuse caps. On August 11, 1926, at about five o’clock in the afternoon, the plaintiff, Sarah Williams, ten years of age, granddaughter of said T. J. Williams, and who made her home with him, was sent to the filling station to wait on, customers in the absence of her grandfather. As she went to the station she saw a dynamite cap lying at the base of defendant’s pole near the station. She picked it up, and not knowing that it was dangerous, and thinking that it would make a noise like a fire cracker, she obtained' a match and lighted it, and applied it to the cap thereby causing the cap to explode before she could throw it away, which caused painful and permanent injuries, for which she brought this suit.

We are of the opinion that none of said assignments of errors are well taken and all of them must be overruled.

We are of the opinion that there was sufficient circumstantial evidence for the case to be submitted to the jury on the propositions of whether the dynamite cap was defendant’s and whether its employees left it on the roadside.

There was evidence that the exploded cap had two small wires extending from one end that were fastened in the cap by means of yellow cement like those used by the defendant, and resembled them. It was found at, the base of defendant’s pole on the left side of the pike where defendant had worked near the filling station. The hole was dug and blasted out with dynamite bv the use of such caps, and said pole was placed therein by the defendant on the day before the accident, and no other person or company had blasted in that vicinity at that time.

*4 Mr. Williams testified that he picked up near the post where the child had been a piece of an exploded cap with a yellow tip of cement on the end of the same; that he asked the man on the service wagon of defendant Eailway & Light Co., to show him the caps that thev used and he noticed that the wires in all of their caps were cemented in with yellow cement. The foreman of the Eailway & Light Co on being asked if there was any likelihood of any cement being left on the wire after an explosion, said there was just one chance in a hundred, but sometimes some of the cement would stick to the wire.

It is claimed by the company that the caps of .the Cumberland Telephone Company were like those of the Eailway & Light Company, but there is proof that the Telephone Company was in that vicinity more than three weeks prior to the accident, and did no blasting at that time, and it is therefore certain that that company and its employees did not leave the cap at the base of that pole which was placed there the day before the accident. The proof shows that that hole was blasted out for the pole on the day before the accident, and if the cap had been at the place she found' it the explosion of the dynamite would have exploded the cap, and the employees of the Light Company in making their careful inspection for caps would have seen the cap thus exposed.

The proof and argument of the defendant are based on two propositions, first, that the Cumberland Telephone Comnany, the Lavergne Telephone Company and the contractor for the Qtate Highway Department were blasting in the same place on the highway near the filling station so that it was impossible to say what company had negligently left the cap at that place on the roadside: and second, that the cap causing the injury was different from the caps used by the defendant, in that the defendant’s cap could not be exploded with a lighted match.

On the first proposition six witnesses for the defendant Eailway & Light Comnany, employees engaged in blasting on the Murfreesboro Pike, testified that a,t the same time that they were blasting on the' left side of the road, the Cumberland Telephone Company and La-vergne Telephone Company were blasting across the road on the right side, and that the highway forces were blasting on the pike. But three witnesses besides T. J.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Tenn. App. 1, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nashville-railway-light-co-v-williams-ex-rel-williams-tennctapp-1929.