Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. McAdoo

10 S.W.2d 503, 178 Ark. 111, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 438
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 22, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 10 S.W.2d 503 (Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. McAdoo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. McAdoo, 10 S.W.2d 503, 178 Ark. 111, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 438 (Ark. 1928).

Opinion

¡Mehaffy, J.

The appellee brought suit in the Saline Circuit Court against the Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, to recover damages for an injury alleged to have -been caused by the negligence of the telephone company.

Appellee had a telephone in his front room, and had got up to get the baby a drinlc'of water; had the baby in his arms, and was standing under an electric light drop, and was about 15 or 16 feet from the telephone instrument. Appellee alleges that a flash of lightning came, and he was knocked down. It is claimed that the lightning came in through the telephone instrument and struck McAdoo, and that it was because the telephone company had negligently and carelessly failed to use ordinary care in installing the telephone, in that it adopted no precautions to prevent charges of atmospheric electricity entering appellee’s residence, and that it failed to use known and approved appliances and devices to prevent such occurrence. Appellee also alleged that the telephone company negligently and carelessly failed to ground its telephone wires, or, if grounded at all, they were grounded in a careless and indifferent manner, in that no iron rod was driven into the ground and the wires attached thereto.

Appellant denies all the material allegations of the complaint, and alleges that, if appellee was injured as claimed, it was due to an act of Grod and causes which appellant could not foresee or control. '

The appellee testified, in substance, that he was 43 years of age. He lives in Benton, and works for the railroad company; is a bridge carpenter, and has been with them about two years; makes 67 cents an hour, and works eight hours and a half. He had lived at his present residence since the latter part of the year 1926, but does not own the property. The telephone company installed a telephone in his residence after he moved there, but he did not see them put it in. There was a very severe storm the night he was injured; it hailed and lightened all night. Between ten and eleven o’clock he got up and put on his clothes, then lay down on the bed. The folks were seared of the storm, so he got up and walked in the kitchen to get the baby some water. He heard something pop, and the lights went out during the flash, and he was knocked out. That was the last he remembers. The lightning seemed to come through the house. There was the popping and then the flash. He was 15 or 16 feet from the telephone, and facing the ’phone the way he walked into the room. There is a door right straight through to the telephone. The lightning came from that direction, from towards the telephone. The telephone fuses were burned out. The batteries were burned out and thrown away. They were taken out next day. They put in new batteries. The injury seemed to paralyze him. When he recovered consciousness he could not talk and could not raise his arm; he was helpless. People were bathing him. He could not control his limbs nor hold his head up. It hurt on the side of his head. That was the worst place. He could not swallow water or anything. It was 40 or 50 minutes before he realized anything. When he regained consciousness he was sitting in the front room in a chair, and the doctor was there; several people were there. He bit his tongue, and it was bleeding. It was next morning before he could swallow, and several days before he could talk. The hurt commenced on the side of his head and went down the back of his neck, and his eyes pained him. He can’t see to read; was not troubled like that before the injury. Cannot read an ordinary newspaper. This condition has existed ever since his injury, and he does not seem to get better. Often in trying to talk he tries to say things, and cannot say them right. 'After the injury he was confined to his home 14 days, and in bed about half that time. He is not now able to do work that requires the use of his eyes like he could before. His job was lining up the forms, and he can’t see to line them up as he could before. Was earning about $5.36 a day; was off 14 days.

He had had a telephone about two years prior to the time he moved into, his present home. The ’phone was put in where he now lives about two weeks after he moved there. The house he lives in is about square. The telephone is a wall type. The lights were on when he got the water. His house is lighted by electricity; there is a drop cord with a globe and a snap-off at t-he end of that. He is five feet nine inches tall; the cord would come down within eight or nine feet of the floor — has about a three-foot cord. The living room is about twelve by twelve; the kitchen is about the same size. There is an electric light drop in the living room and one in the kitchen. The telephone had been working all right when he attempted to use it from time to time before the injury. There was a storm the night he was injured, and a house was struck by lightning across the street. A transformer or some lighting device burned out in his neighborhood, but he did not know where it was located, but several blocks west of the house, not on his street. At the time appellee was injured the lights were out. The lights went out, and that is all he knows about it. It hit him, and he was in bed all next day. The telephone was on the wall in the living room, and he was standing about the center of the kitchen.

Witness came in through the door — came into the kitchen. When he made his turn he would be facing the telephone, because the ’phone is right in front of1 the door. The light fuses were not burned out. The transformer was fixed next day, and the lights came on. There was nothing done to the lights in the house. The telephone fuses were blown out and the batteries burned out. The telephone line came down the west side of the street across from the house; they were strung on the light company’s poles. Appellee was the only person on that street that had a telephone.

Dr. Blakely, physician, testified that he attended Mr. MpAdoo, and tha’t he was in a nervous condition, and would have a twisting or jerking of the muscles of the face. His speech was had. Knew that he had received some kind of'shook. Such a shock as appellee received would he produced by a stroke of lightning. At the time he thought that appellee’s condition was such as to endanger his life; that he would probably die. He gave him some narcotics to relieve him. Does not think a man that received shock like that would likely stand any severe cold, or hear — doesn’t believe his nerves would stand it. Such a shock might affect the eyes.

Nelson McAdoo, son of the appellee, eleven years old, testified, in substance, that he was there when they put in the telephone. He watched the man put it in. When the man was putting in the telephone he just hung the ground wire down the side of the wall; he didn’t stick it in the ground; it just hung down there; he did not have an iron rod or anything that he drove in the ground that he attached it to; witness was there when he fixed the telephone after his father got hurt, and watched the man fix it. The man left the house three different times. The last time he came he used an iron rod, and attached the wire to it. He got the iron rod when he went back to the office, and when he got back he drove it into the ground and fixed the wire around it. When the man was repairing the telephone he scratched around to see if there was any ground wire there; he didn’t find any; there was none there for him to find. The last time the man was there he said there ought to have been a rod there.

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.W.2d 503, 178 Ark. 111, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-bell-telephone-co-v-mcadoo-ark-1928.