Southwestern Gas & Electric Co. v. Williams

76 F.2d 49, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 2455
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 2, 1935
DocketNo. 7518
StatusPublished

This text of 76 F.2d 49 (Southwestern Gas & Electric Co. v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit 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. Williams, 76 F.2d 49, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 2455 (5th Cir. 1935).

Opinions

BRYAN, Circuit Judge.

W. M. Williams sued the Southwestern Gas & Electric Company to recover damages for personal injuries resulting from his coming in contact with an uninsulated electric light wire belonging to that company, while he was engaged in stringing a telephone wire along the rear wall of a building for his employer, the Postal Telegraph-Cable Company. Besides the general issue, the defendant pleaded that the plaintiff after receiving his injuries released his employer, and thereby released also the defendant, from all liability for damages; that plaintiff was injured while he was trespassing upon the property of the owner of the building, and was guilty of contributory negligence. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. The defendant appeals, and, assigns as error the denial of its motion for the peremptory instruction, which was based on all the grounds of defense interposed except that of contributory negligence. It also assigns as error a charge of the court withdrawing from the jury and rejecting the defense of release. Assuming that the issue of trespass was for the jury to decide, no fault is found with the way in which it was submitted to them. The court’s charges on negligence and contributory negligence are not objected to, but complaint is made of the court’s refusal to give additional requested charges on those issues.

The accident occurred in August, 1932. A four-story building, known as the O’Dwyer building, abutted in the rear on an alley. It was erected in 1926, but had been vacant for two years. Before it became vacant the Postal Company placed eight brackets along the rear wall, added sixteen knobs each capable of holding four telephone wires, and installed, one above the other, at least eight telephone wires. There was tes[51]*51timony that this was done by permission of the manager of the building, and, although the latter denied giving his consent, it is undisputed that the Postal Company’s wires remained as they had been placed in plain view up to the time of the accident. The defendant maintained poles across the alley for carrying its electric light wires; and from one of them installed several wires carrying 110 volts for the purpose of furnishing light to .the building while it was occupied, and after it became vacant cut those wires where they entered, hut left them attached to, the building about 25 feet above the ground and some 14 inches below the position of the lowest telephone wire. Its employee who disconnected the light wires testified that or 4 inches at the ends were uninsulated; that he rolled each end up and taped it to the service wire leading from the pole. It is not clear whether he meant to say that he taped the bare ends, or only that the insulated parts of the wires were fastened together by tape. Photographs offered in evidence rather indicate that the bare ends were left untaped. However this may be, it is conceded that the electric light wires were not inspected by the defendant from the time they were cut until after the plaintiff was injured. At the time of the accident the plaintiff was standing on a ladder which was leaning against the rear wall of the O’Dwyer building over or alongside the uninsulated ends of defendant’s wires, and was engaged in attaching a new telephone wire to a bracket on which the Postal Company’s wires were strung. While in this position, and while holding onto a fire escape with one hand, he unintentionally let his other hand come into contact with the bare end of one of defendant’s light wires and received a shock of electricity which caused him to fall off the ladder to the ground, with the result that he sustained very serious injuries. He testified that he did not see defendant’s w-ires until he went up the ladder, and did not know or realize that they were charged with electricity or were dangerous; that, though he was an experienced telephone lineman, he had never done any work for an electric light company. The Postal Company, while the plaintiff was in its employ, maintained for its employees a “Pension and Benefit Plan” which contained a provision to the effect that an employee injured in the course of his work could elect whether to claim benefits under it or to sue the company for damages. An employee’s election to claim benefits under the plan operated to release the Postal Company from all claims and demands in an action at law.1 On the day after the accident the plaintiff signified his election to accept benefits under that plan by signing a paper in printed form evidencing such election, and also in consideration of $1 and receipt of the first installment of benefits, and the Postal Company’s promise and agreement to pay future benefits, released that company from all suits or claims that he might have against it on account of the accident and resulting injuries. The printed form concluded with the formal expression, “in witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal,” but no seal or scroll appeared thereon, or accompanied or was affixed to plaintiff’s signature. Under the Postal Company’s plan, the plaintiff was entitled to and had received full pay for total disability during the first thirteen weeks, and thereafter half pay for total disability. Up to the date of the trial he had received $886 for 56 weeks of total disability, and his employer had paid $644 for hospital and doctors’ bills. The court instructed the jury to deduct the aggregate of these amounts from any judgment they might find for the plaintiff, and presumably this was done. The court further charged the jury that if the Postal Company had no consent, express or implied, to place their wires on the O’Dwyer building where plaintiff was working, then the plaintiff would be a mere trespasser, and the defendant would not owe him any duty or care except to refrain from willfully injuring him; but that if the Postal Company’s wires were placed .where they were with the express or implied consent of the owners of the O’Dwyer building, the defendant would owe the plaintiff the duty to exercise that degree of care to prevent injury which an ordinarily prudent person would exercise in the same or similar circumstances ; that it was the defendant’s duty [52]*52to exercise such ordinary care to keep its instrumentalities in reasonably safe condition to avoid injury to those who might rightfully come on the premises, but that for an injury which could not reasonably have been foreseen or anticipated as a probable result of an act of negligence, there could be no recovery. The court refused to charge as requested by the defendant to return a verdict in its favor on. the ground that defendant’s electric wires were not shown to have been left uninsulated, and also that it was the duty of the jury to find for the defendant unless they believed that those wires were left uninsulated, and that the defendant knew or should have known that the Postal Company’s employees would be called upon and would perform work in connection with the telephone wires attached to the rear of the O’Dwyer building. On the subject of contributory negligence the jury were told that it was the duty of the plaintiff to observe ordinary care for his own safety and, if he failed to do so, or if he knew or should in the exercise of ordinary care have known of the condition complained of, or of the danger incident thereto, he should be held to have assumed the risk, and could not recover. Other charges requested on negligence and contributory negligence, in so far as they contained correct statements of applicable law, were given in substance by the court in its general charge.

In our opinion it was not error to deny defendant’s motion for the peremptory instruction.

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Bluebook (online)
76 F.2d 49, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 2455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-gas-electric-co-v-williams-ca5-1935.