Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Lee

292 S.W.2d 45, 40 Tenn. App. 352, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 115
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 22, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 292 S.W.2d 45 (Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Lee) 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
Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Lee, 292 S.W.2d 45, 40 Tenn. App. 352, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 115 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

A VERY, P. J.,

(Western Section). The record in this Court is that of two cases, one by Myrtle Lee for $75,000 damages, and one by her husband W. C. Lee for $25,000, both against the Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company, coming to this court from the Law Court of Shelby County, Division Two, the Honorable John W. Wilson, Judge, where the cases were tried together to a jury, with separate verdicts and separate judgments, the verdict in one case in favor of Mrs. Myrtle Lee for $9,-500 and in the other case for her husband W. C. Lee in the amount of $500, which respective judgments were approved by the Trial Court upon motion for a new trial. The defendant below having preserved exceptions, prayed appeal to this Court, have perfected same, and assigned errors.

[354]*354■ The suit by Myrtle Lee was for personal injury to her body, particularly to her left knee and leg, and by W. C. Lee for damages sustained by him, as her husband for failure of consortium and expenses due to her injury.

Mrs. Lee was injured on May 12, 1953 about 2 o’clock P. M., when she alighted from her pick-up truck which she had stopped at the curb of 899 Pennsylvania Street, in the city of Memphis, had started walking from her pick-up truck to the Northside Pish Company, near where she had parked her truck, and as she walked across the grass plot near the sidewalk the surface dirt gave way under her left foot which sank into a shallow hole, causing her to almost fall, and severely injuring her left leg and knee. She was a heavy person, weighing over 200 pounds. A few days after the injury she was placed in the hospital where she was confined for 31 days with her leg and foot in traction. She left the hospital about the middle of July, 1953, after being fitted with a single outer-bar long leg brace and a cage knee attachment. Continuing to suffer she was again admitted to a hospital on August 5, 1953, where she was confined and operated on September 9, 1953, and finally dismissed from the hospital on November 17, 1953.

Facts alleged in the Declaration as the causes for the earth giving away under her left foot at the time she was injured are simple, concise, and while denied by the pleas, are practically admitted in the evidence and in the brief of Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company, the plaintiff in error.

The Memphis Street Railway Company and the Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company prior to, during and since the year 1934, jointly owned certain [355]*355poles, from which the trolleys of the Street Railway Company were supported and to which the telephone lines or wires of the defendant were attached. By the record of the Companies kept at the time, these poles were numbered, the number of the one in question being "3760” located on the west side of what is now Pennsylvania Street and about in the center of the block between Illinois Avenue and California Avenue, all in the City of Memphis. (Photostatic Record Exhibit attached, to R. 095). On the records then kept, these jointly owned poles were designated by the letters B. M., the B meaning Bell Telephone Company and the M, Memphis Street Railway Company. Arrangement by the two companies for the replacement and upkeep of such jointly owned poles is referred to and explained, as shown by a letter dated June 12, 1931, addressed to Mr. Nathan Wood, Auditor, Electric Bond and Share Company, signed by R. W. McKee, then Supt. Overhead Lines for The Memphis Street Railway Company, photograph of which is exhibited with the record and attached to same at page 106. This letter refers to the joint contracts and agreements between the Memphis Street Railway Company and several companies, including the defendant company. It is not necessary to quote it in full, but the pertintent parts are as follows:

"As per your request, we are submitting, herewith, the following information regarding individual poles and contracts governing jointly owned poles of The Memphis Street Railway Company as of December 31, 1929.”

The letter then sets out the names of the different companies having joint interest in poles, and further says:

[356]*356“We Lave contracts which are general in scope, covering jointly owned poles. Also written agreements covering specific lines.
“Under all these agreements, jointly owned poles are maintained jointly. It has been the practice of the Railway Company to replace all two-way joint poles with the Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Company and bill the Telephone Company for their part. * * * Each company transfers their own attachments at their expense.”

On April 10, 1934, Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company received a letter directed to the attention of its Mr. Yogt, written by the “Supt. Overhead Lines” of The Memphis Street Railway Company, saying:

“Gentlemen: We are attaching hereto list of 2-way joint poles of The Memphis Street Railway Company and Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Company that have been condemned on our annual inspection.
“Kindly have these poles inspected and if you concur with us please furnish us with list of height of jmles that you desire and we will replace same and bill you for one-half cost.” (Ex. R. 100)

Attached to the foregoing letter was a list of 38 poles designated by number and by location, one of which was the pole in question, number “3760”.

The defendant replied on the date of April 12, 1934 by its letter addressed to The Memphis Street Railway Company, to the attention of its Mr. R. W. McKee, in which it said:

“Gentlemen: In reply to your letter of April 10, 1934 with reference to replacement of the following [357]*3572-way joint poles, it will be agreeable with tbis Company for The Memphis Street Bailway Company to make the replacements and bill the Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Company for one-half cost: ’ ’
(Exhibit attached B. 103)

That letter identifies a list of 16 poles described by number and location, one of which is the pole in question, number “3760”.

On May 14, 1934, the “Supt. Overhead Lines” of the Memphis Street Bailway Company, wrote a letter to defendant addressed to Memphis, Tennessee, and to the attention of Mr. B. W. Vogt, in which it said:

“Gentlemen: We have replaced joint poles at the following locations” (here the poles by number and location are set forth, one of which is pole number 3760). “Please transfer your attachments to the new poles and notify this company when all work is complete so that we may remove the old poles.” (Exhibits. 104)

On April 13, 1954, The Memphis Street Bailway Company issued a “work order” to its “Overhead Line Dept. ’ ’, by which it directed its Overhead Line Dept, to “Beplace the attached list of 19 defective poles owned jointly by M. St. By. and S. B. T. & T. Poles condemned on annual inspection. Bill SB T. & T. “one-half cost.”

(Exhibit B. 109)

On Sept. 12, 1954, The Memphis Street Bailway Company billed the defendant for $304.69, one-half of the total bill itemized specifically and to which is attached list of 16 replaced joint owned poles, one of which is number [358]*3583760. The notation, on this bill, which is a completely-itemized bill, is:

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360 S.W.2d 64 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W.2d 45, 40 Tenn. App. 352, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-bell-telephone-telegraph-co-v-lee-tennctapp-1955.