San Antonio Gas & Electric Co. v. Ocon

146 S.W. 162, 105 Tex. 139, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 126
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1912
DocketNo. 2204.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 146 S.W. 162 (San Antonio Gas & Electric Co. v. Ocon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
San Antonio Gas & Electric Co. v. Ocon, 146 S.W. 162, 105 Tex. 139, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 126 (Tex. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibrell

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit by the widow and children of Jacinto Ocon against the San Antonio Gas & Electric Company, Martin Wright and the City of San Antonio to recover damages for his death alleged to have occurred by the joint negligence of said defendants.

It was alleged by plaintiffs that while Jacinto Ocon was driving a delivery wagon along a public street in the City of San Antonio, the umbrella attached to the seat of the wagon came in contact with a wire stretched across the street, and thereby the seat on which he was riding was pulled 'off and he was thrown to the ground and received injuries from which he died.

It was also alleged that the wire was stretched across the street by the defendant, Martin Wright, an electrical contractor, for the defendant, San Antonio Gas & Electric Company, and when completed was turned over to the Gas & Electric Company.

The grounds of negligence set out and relied upon as relating to the wire were that it was improperly insulated, improperly strung on the poles in such a way as to make it a constant danger to the traveling *141 public, and its manner of stringing was in violation of the ordinances of the city, less than twenty-five feet above the curbing. Greater particularity in stating plaintiffs’ pleadings is not essential to a full understanding of the material issues involved.

The City of San Antonio was dismissed from the suit upon the ground that a municipal corporation could not be liable for an injury resulting in death.

Martin Wright, among other things, pleaded specially the statute of limitations, upon which the jury were instructed by the court to find in his favor.

San Antonio Gas & Electric Company, among other pleas not necessary to mention, pleaded that it was not responsible for the death of Ocon, because the wire mentioned in plaintiffs’ petition was neither constructed, owned nor controlled by it.

The cause having been tried with the assistance of a jury verdict was rendered for plaintiffs for $5,000.00 and duly apportioned among those entitled to receive it.

The material facts developed in the case are practically without dispute, and show that in September, 1907, the Mexican people of San Antonio, wishing to celebrate some event of interest to them, appointed a committee to confer with the defendant, San Antonio Gas & Electric Company, and arranged for lighting San Pedro Park where the celebration was to take place. The committee conferred with the general manager of the Gas and Electric Company and it was agreed that this company would furnish free of charge the electric current for lighting the Park, if the committee for the Mexican people would put up the wiring and provide everything for the reception of the current. In pursuance of this understanding the wire with which the umbrella on deceased’s wagon came in contact was erected by the defendant, Martin Wright, through one of his employes, at the request of and for the committee for the Mexican celebration, and he was paid for the work by this committee. The committee directed the electrical contractor where to place the wires and all poles and other material was supplied either by the committee or the electrical contractor, and the San Antonio Gas & Electric Company gave no instruction as to where or how to place the wires and had nothing to do with placing the wire across the street. In preparing the wires for receiving the electric current the contractor for the Mexican society attached one to the pole of the Gas & Electric Company extending across one of the public streets of the City. This was the wire upon which the umbrellattached to the deceased’s wagon was caught and by which he was thrown from the wagon receiving injuries from which he died. Where this wire was attached to the Gas & Electric Company’s pole a switch was there placed by the contractor for the committee, and the point where the wire in question left the pole was twenty-five or thirty feet above the street curbing. After this wire was attached to the pole and a switch placed there by the committee’s contractor the Gas & Electric Company did nothing more than to run a connection from the transformer to its pole down to the side of the pole to the point where the committee had directed a switch placed and by the means of a short wire connect with the top of such switch. When the wire *142 was thrown down it was repaired by Martin Wright, the electrical contractor, and after the celebration was over, having lasted for three days, the electrical contractor had his employes take the wires down and return them to his shop. The current furnished by the Gas & Electric Company was connected with the wire in question by means of throwing the switch which was placed on the pole by the defendant, Martin Wright, and this switch was thrown each night by the park policeman at the instance of the celebration committee in order to secure the current. At the time of the accident the current was not on the wire complained of. The Gas & Electric Company received no compensation for furnishing the current. The .facts do not disclose how long the wire across the street from which contact with the wagon caused the death of Ocom was in a swagging condition, but .it was shown that on the night previous the wire was up and properly constructed.

The question involved in this case does not embrace the liability of defendant, Gas & Electric Company, for damages resulting from contact with the dangerous and potent force of an electric current. The uncontradicted facts exclude that issue, and we are circumscribed to the sole question of its liability for damages resulting from contact with a plain wire strung, owned.and controlled by others than the Gas & Electric Company. • The only connection with the wire in question attributable to this company is its tacit or implied consent that the wire might be attached to its pole for the purpose of furnishing the owners or lessees of the wire the electric current for temporarily lighting the park for a celebration conducted by such owner or lessees.

The evidence discloses without dispute that the wire in question was in the beginning properly strung, and that its sagging condition occurred afterwards. It was not shown by the evidence at what time the defective condition of the wire occurred, or how long it had remained in such condition, or that the condition the wire was in at the time Ocon’s umbrella came in contact with it was known to this defendant. We think that at the time the implied consent of this defendant to its co-defendant, Martin Wright, or the committee for the Mexican celebration, was given to attach the wire to its pole in so far as any injury might result from such wire, independent of the electric current, by reason of its improper construction this defendant was not legally bound to see that the wire was properly strung, and in the absence of actual knowledge that it was improperly or defectively strung the Gas & Electric Company would presume that those who were in charge of stringing the wire and for whose benefit it was strung would perform the work in a proper manner and in compliance with the city ordinances.

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.W. 162, 105 Tex. 139, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-antonio-gas-electric-co-v-ocon-tex-1912.