Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. Myane

111 S.W. 987, 86 Ark. 548, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 452
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 111 S.W. 987 (Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. Myane) 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 Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. Myane, 111 S.W. 987, 86 Ark. 548, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 452 (Ark. 1908).

Opinion

Hart, J.

Edward Myane brought suit against the Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Company and E. J. Spencer, as receiver of the Texarkana Light & Traction Company, in the Miller Circuit Court for $150 damages for the killing of his horse, which is alleged to have been caused by the horse coming in contact with what is called a “live” wire through the negligence of said defendant companies.

The facts are substantially as follows: On the 18th day of October, 1906, in the afternoon, while a car of the defendant electric company was running along Broad Street in the city of Texarkana, its trolley pole came off of the wire on which it was being carried, flew up and struck a telephone wire stretched above it and across the street. The force of the blow broke the telephone wire, and it fell down over the trolley wire, and extended down over the travelled portion of the street. When the telephone wire came in contact with the trolley wire, it became charged with the electricity carried by the trolley wire and thus became what is termed a “live” wire. After it had laid there about twenty-five minutes, the mother of the plaintiff came along driving his horse to a buggy. She testified that the sun was shining in her face, and that she did not see the wire until the horse became entangled in it. When the horse came in contact with the wire, it stood there, shivered a few times and fell dead.

The horse is admitted to be of the value of one hundred and fifty dollars.

A city ordinance regulating the placing of telephone and electric street car wires in the streets of Texarkana was read in evidence as follows:

“Sec. 3. The poles used by any of said companies shall be of sound timber, and all poles hereafter put up shall not be less than five inches in diameter at the small end, straight, shapely and of uniform size, neatly shaved or planed, and each of said companies shall have on all of its poles painted the initials of its name in large, black letters. The telephone and telegraph wires shall run at a height of not less than twenty-five feet above the grade of a street or alley, except in the suburbs or residence portion of said city, where they shall run at a height of not less than twenty feet above the grade of a street or alley; and the electric light or street car wire shall be placed a't a height above the grade of a street or alley not less than twenty feet. Whenever it may be necessary in the construction or operation of such lines and plants for said lines to cross each other, the electric light wire shall not run nearer than five feet to said telegraph and telephone wires, and in all such cases and at all such crossings, the 'electric light and street car wires shall be placed un'der the said telegraph and telephone wires, and all such crossings shall be inspected and approved by the city engineer, to whom notice of such intended crossing shall be given by the company making the same, before it is done; and the telegraph and telephone wires shall not be nearer each other than three feet.”

George Conway, a witness for the defendant street car company, testified as follows: That he remembered the time Myane’s horse was killed. That he received no notice of the bad condition of any of the wires prior to the killing of the horse. That he went down with Col. Spencer after the accident to make some measurements, and saw where the wire had been broken. That it was broken on the north side of the street. When asked how high the insulator to which’ the telephone wire was attached was from the ground, he answered: “To the best of my knowledge, it was twenty-seven feet or about that.” He stated that the wire was attached to Crowder’s hide house on the opposite side of the street, a distance of about 124.4 feet, 14 feet above the side walk. That the distance from the hide house to the center of the street car track was 70.4 feet; from the center of the track back to the pole on the north side was 54 feet. That a wire could not have been stretched across there without having some sag in it. That, to the best of his recollection, the telephone wire was a little over 22 feet from the ground at the point where it crossed the trolley wire. That he measured the height of the car and the trolley pole, and that, when standing pérpendicularly, the trolley pole would reach' 22.6 feet above the ground. That if the telephone wire had been stretched over 22.6 feet above the grade of the street, the trolley pole could not have touched it. That the trolley wire on Broad Street at the place where the accident occurred was 18 feet above the ground. The accident occurred in the business section of Texarkana. The telephone wire had been put up there three, four or five months prior to the accident, and crossed the street at the place where the accident occurred.

There was a jury trial; a verdict of $150 was returned against the telephone company. Whereupon the court entered judgment against the telephone company for that amount, and discharged the. street car company from liability. The telephone 'company has appealed to this court, and Edward Myane has taken a cross appeal from the judgment in favor of 'the street car company.

In City Electric Street Railway Co. v. Conery, 61 Ark. 381, speaking of the duties of persons using a street for suspending wires charged with electricity, this court said:

“Subjecting the dangerous elements of electricity to their control and using it for their own purposes- by means of wires suspended over the streets, it is their duty to maintain it in such a manner as to protect such persons against injury by it, to the extent they can do so by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence. This duty is not limited to keeping their own wires out of the streets, or other public highways, but extends to the preservation of the escape of the dangerous force in their service through any wires brought in contact with their own, and of its transmission thereby to anyone using the streets. Only in this way can the public receive that protection due it while exercising its rights in the highways in or over which electric wires are suspended.”

It is manifest that in passing the ordinance prescribing the height of the wires of the telephone company and of the street railway company and their relative distance from each other when it was necessary for their wires to, cross each other, the council recognized the danger to the public when these wires came in contact, and had in view the protection of persons who had a right to travel upon the-streets. The passage of the ordinance was a municipal regulation, authorized • by the laws of the Slate, and has the force of a statute within the limits of the city. It was the duty of the defendant companies to comply with the ordinance, and a failure to do so is prima facie evidence of negligence on their part. These principles are established by the following authorities: Hayes v. Michigan Central Rd. Co., 111 U. S. 228; Mitchell v. Raleigh Electric Co., 83 Am. St. Rep. (N. C.), 735; Brush Electric Light & Power Co., v. Lefevre, 55 S. W. (Tex. Civ. App.), 396; Knowlton v. Des Moines Edison Light Co., 90 N. W. (Iowa), 818; Clements v. La. Electric Light Co., 44 La. Ann. 692.

We have read and considered the instructions given by the' court, and, without setting them out, we may say that, when taken' as a whole and tested by the principles of law announced above, there is no reversible error in them.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.W. 987, 86 Ark. 548, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-telegraph-telephone-co-v-myane-ark-1908.