Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. French

245 S.W. 997, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 319
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 10, 1922
DocketNo. 8234.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 245 S.W. 997 (Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. French) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. French, 245 S.W. 997, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 319 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

What we regard as a substantially correct statement of the nature and result of this suit is taken from the brief filed in this court for the appellees as follows:

“This suit originated in the district court of Harris county, Tex., Fifty-Fifth judicial district, and was brought by the appellees, J. E. French and his wife, Mrs. J. E. Frelhch, against the appellant, Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Company, to recover damages on account of the death of John W. French, Jr., their son, who fell and was killed while in the employ of the telephone company on the 28th day of October, 1911.
“The deceased, an inexperienced minor, had .been working for the telephone company just a short time before his death. During the time that he was working for the company he was under Adrian Hall, cable splicer for the telephone company. The deceased was Hall's helper, and a helper is subject to the orders of the cable splicer, whose duty it is to instruct him and show him how the work is done. The cable is a bundle of telephone wire incased in lead and suspended by clips from the ‘messenger wire,’ a large steel wire stretched from pole to pole. While splicing the cable, Hall and deceased worked on a platform, suspended from the messenger wire by four leather straps, one at each corner. Each strap had a hook at one end to fasten to the platform and at the other end to fasten to the messenger wire. The hooks on the straps were fitted with safety snaps or catches to prevent them from slipping off when once attached. The platform was steadied by a guy line, attached by hooks fitted with safety catches or snaps. The purpose of the safety snap is to prevent the hook from coming loose and slipping off the wire. To be used in connection with their work, the telephone company also furnished to1 Hall and the deceased a hand line, consisting of a rope, a pulley, and two hooks. One of the hooks, the stationary one, was attached to the pulley, and intended to fit over the messenger wire, and the other hook was attached to the rope which ran in the pulley, and was used in hoistihg material from the ground. The hooks on the hand line were open hooks, and had no safety catches or devices to prevent them from slipping from the wire. Hall testified that the usual and customary way of coming from the platform to the ground when the splicer and his assistant were as much as 12 or 15 feet from a pole was by coming down the hand line. Hall had never told' young French not to go down that way, and during the entire time that French had been working under Hall, Hall had been going down the hand line when he was that distance away from the pole.
“On the day that young French fell, he and Hall were splicing a cable at the corner of Walnut street and Providence street in Houston. The messenger wire that they were working on ran down Walnut street, and they were about 85 feet from the ground and 12 or 15 feet from the nearest telephone pole. There was a messenger wire on Providence street which crossed the one on Walnut street at right angles, these two wires touching as they crossed: the one running down Providence street being on. top. The platform was suspended from the messenger wire running down Walnut street, and the hand line from the messenger wire running down Providence street, as young French and Hall were working very close to the intersection. On the telephone pole nearest to where they were working there were electric light wires, and Hall considered these wires dangerous. At about 11:45 a. m., Hall and French were on the platform, and Hall ordered French to go down to the ground and make a test for Hall. French started down from the platform, and put his leg around the hand line, swinging himself off to go down. Hall heard a noise of the rattling of the block, and looked up in time to see French falling, with his leg around the hand line in the usual way, and the hand line and block falling with him; the hook by which the hand line was suspended from the mesenger wire having slipped off of the messenger wire. From the result of this fall young French died the next morning.
“Upon the first trial of this case thq district court instructed a verdict in favor of the telephone company, and, from the judgment based on such verdict French and wife appe.aled. The Court of Civil Appeals at El Paso, by a divided court, held that the action of the trial court in peremptorily instructing a verdict for the telephone company was error, and reversed and remanded the case. French v. Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co., 162 S. W. 406.
“On account of the dissenting opinion, the Court of Civil Appeals at El Paso certified to the Supreme Court the following question: ‘Did the trial court err in giving the peremptory instruction?’ The Supreme Court answered the certified question that the trial court erred in instructing a verdict for the telephone company. French v. Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co., 110 Tex. 505, 221 S. W. 570.
“Upon the presei/t trial before a jury, the case being submitted on special issues, the jury returned answers to all of the special issues favorable to the appellees, and judgment was /rendered in their favor on such verdict, from which judgment this appeal has been perfected.”

Appellant, telephone company, upon this appeal first contends that the trial court •should have instructed a verdict in its favor on the ground that the evidence was insuf *1000 ficient to show any negligence on its part as the cause of the. casualty. This precise question, though then raised hy the present appellees, was the sole issue upon the former appeal, and, since there is no material change in the evidence bearing upon liability, its controlling features upon both trials consisting of practically the same testimony from Adrian Hall, we think the Supreme Court’s former decision settles the law of the case against appellant in so far as concerns the peremptory instructions. French v. Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co., 110 Tex. 505, 221 S. W. 570, supra. Nor is it deemed essential that the matter be again discussed, but reference is made to the opinion of Judge Higgins for the El Paso Court of Civil Appeals, 162 S. W. 406, which the Supreme Court held to be a clear and correct one.

Likewise we conclude that appellant’s accompanying insistence that the trial court should have instructed in its favor, on the ground of a conclusive showing from the evidence that the deceased, in the circum'stances presented, assumed the risk inhering in his employment, cannot be sustained; this too, we think,. as well as whether the telephone company was negligent, was clearly a question of fact for the jury, and not one of law for the court. The undisputed evidence shows thkt the hook on which the block carrying the hand line was suspended was an open one; that if a snap or safety catch had been used on it the danger of its becoming disengaged from the messenger wire would at least have been materially lessened; the use of it in this open condition, notwithstanding its habitual and customary employment in that form by ^appellant and other companies in the business, raised an issue of negligence vel non on appellant’s part. Lyon v. Bedgood, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 19, 117 S. W. 900 ; Railway Co. v. Smith, 87 Tex. 359, 28 S. W. 520; Railway v. Evansich, 61 Tex. 7; Monaghan v. Mill Co., 81 Cal. 190, 22 Pac. 590.

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245 S.W. 997, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-telegraph-telephone-co-v-french-texapp-1922.