Southwestern Gas & Electric Co. v. Denney

82 S.W.2d 17, 190 Ark. 934, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 159
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 13, 1935
Docket4-3868
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 82 S.W.2d 17 (Southwestern Gas & Electric Co. v. Denney) 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 Gas & Electric Co. v. Denney, 82 S.W.2d 17, 190 Ark. 934, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 159 (Ark. 1935).

Opinion

Baker, J.

On or about August 12, 1934, Hobart Anglin, a boy nearly sixteen years of age, was injured by coming into contact with a wire suspended from one of the high tension wires of the defendant company, the appellant here. The accident occurred on the roadside, or in close proximity, at least, to a road beside which the “high lines” of the defendant company had been constructed and were maintained, in Carroll County, near Kings River Bridge.

Hobart Anglin and two of his boy companions, Elbert Walker and Harold Rhoden, had been swimming one Sunday afternoon and passing near the place of the accident they saw a wire suspended or hanging from one of the defendant’s wires. The lower end of the suspended wire was coiled about a stone or rock and the upper end curved or hooked over one of the high tension lines so that the rock so suspended was just off the edge of the road. Some of the hoys threw rocks or stones at the suspended stone.

Hobart Anglin says that, as he passed under or near the rock suspended in the coil of the foreign or hanging wire, he involuntarily stuck out or threw up his hand and experienced an extreme shock, such as to render him practically unconscious for a considerable length of time. His hand and his forearm were burned and his great toes on each foot were severely burned to the extent that the cushion on the under part of the toes was practically destroyed. Other injuries were alleged.

The complaints filed by Hobart Anglin, by his mother, Lovey May Denney, his next friend, and by his mother, alleged that he was fourteen years oldthat the defendant’s high line of three wires carried a current of 33,000 volts each, and, at a point east of Kings River Bridge, lines run adjacent to the old highway in an easterly and westerly direction, the highway curving slightly at such point, and that said high lines at this curve are parallel with and in the approximate direction of the north side of the highway, and that on the wire nearest the road there was attached a foreign wire to the lower end of which was tied a rock that hung within a short distance of the north side of said highway; that the foreign wire Avas in plain vieAV and easily to be seen from the road; that the defendant Avas negligent in failing to patrol its lines and in failing to discover and remove such foreign wire; that about 4 or 5 p. m., August 12, 1934, Avhile the plaintiff was walking along c.urve on said highway he was passing said Avire and without warning a poAverfnl current of electricity jumped or arced from said wire and struck the plaintiff, passing through his body and knocking him down, and set fire to the grass on the highway, all without fault on the part of plaintiff, but by reason of the negligence of the defendant.

According to the vieAV we have of this case, it is unnecessary at this time to set forth the extent of the injuries as pleaded.

The plaintiff sought to recover $2,999 damages and the mother sought a recovery in a like sum.

A demurrer was filed to the complaint and overruled, and defendant answered denying each and every material allegation of the complaint.

Although separate suits were filed by the two plaintiffs the causes were consolidated and tried together. Hobart Anglin recovered the sum of $2,000 and Mrs. Denney the sum of-$500, from Avhich appeal has been lodged in this court.

Appellants have argued most seriously several questions for our consideration. Among these are the question of liability under the facts pleade’d and concerning Avhich evidence is offered in proof, also the proposition of error in instructions; tlie matter of improper argument on behalf of counsel for appellees, the right of the mother of Hobart Anglin to sue and recover for any losses she may have suffered by reason of the loss of services of her son and attendant expenses by reason of her son’s injuries.

It is not expedient, as we view the issues in this case, that we set forth the testimony of the several witnesses and discuss the proposition of liability. The probative value of the testimony offered by the plaintiffs and defendant, respectively, make questions'for the. determination by the jury, as there were propositions somewhat sharply in dispute.

An examination of the several instructions discloses no substantial or prejudicial error in the submission of the case to the jury, except instruction No. 3, given by the court at plaintiff’s request. This instruction reads as follows: “I charge you that reasonable care or ordinary care is a degree of care varying with the circumstances of each such case, and which in the case of electrical wires carrying a dangerous current of electiicity, requires the exercise of a high degree of care to keep them properly insulated and suspended so as not to endanger lives.”

Defendant objected to this instruction “because there is no allegation in complaint of failure to insulate as ground of negligence, and the law does not require insulation of high, tension high lines. ” The giving of this instruction was error, and the objection made to it by the defendant, when given, is sufficiently specific to call the court’s attention to the vice in it.'

There is no allegation in the complaint that the lines were not insulated, nor is it alleged in the complaint that it was a matter of negligence to use uninsulated wires in the carrying of high voltage electric current over these high tension lines.

The instruction injects into the case, as an act of negligence, the failure to insulate. Special attention is directed to this purported lack of ordinary care. It is axiomatic that ordinary care is a relative term varying in degree according to whatever may be the peculiar circumstances or conditions. Ordinary care must be recognized as the degree of caution commensurate with the threat or menace present. That is probably what the trial court meant in instruction No. 3, the language of which, however, may be construed to mean that more than ordinary care was required in this case, for it says, “that the ordinary care requires the exercise of a high degree of care to keep them (the high lines) properly insulated and suspended so as not to endanger life.”

The evil of this instruction is made more flagrant in consideration of the closing argument of the attorney for the appellee when he said: “The court says they are required to use a high degree of care; they are operating a dangerous instrument, worse than a machine gun, worse than anything you could scatter out over the country. They are required to use a great deal of care to see that nobody gets hurt. They didn’t even have the wires insulated. ’ ’

Objections "were made to this part of the argument and the court sustained this objection. At this point the attorney made this announcement: “Withdrawn. I thought the testimony showed it. The jury will know,” upon which the defendant objected to counsel’s intimation that “the jury will know.” The court overruled that objection by counsel for defendant, and attorney for plaintiffs continued: “I still thought it was; some one «■wore it was not insulated, and put on rubber gloves, Hays or some one.”

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.W.2d 17, 190 Ark. 934, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-gas-electric-co-v-denney-ark-1935.