Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. Sanders

138 S.W. 1181, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1104
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 31, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 138 S.W. 1181 (Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. Sanders) 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. Sanders, 138 S.W. 1181, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1104 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

KEY, C. J.

(after stating the facts as above). [1] In appellant’s brief many objections are urged to the court’s charge; among others being the contention that the definition of negligence is erroneous because of the use of the words “careful and prudent person”; the contention being that the word “careful” should have been omitted. The words “careful” and “prudent” are often used to express the same thought, and we think they were so used in the court’s charge, and that the jury was not misled thereby.

[2] The court’s definition of contributory negligence is also criticised; the contention being that after the word “defendants” the court should have added, “or either of them.” We hold that the charge as framed was not affirmatively erroneous; and, if appellant desired more particularity therein, it should have prepared and requested a special charge supplying the alleged omission.

Many other objections are urged to the court’s charge and to the refusal of requested instructions relating to appellee’s right to recover against appellant. We have neither the time nor inclination to discuss them all in detail, and deem it sufficient to say that, after careful consideration, we rule against appellant, and hold that the assignments presenting those questions are not well taken and show no ground for reversal.

[3] It is also urged in appellant’s brief, and in oral argument of appellant’s counsel, that error wás committed in rejecting a requested instruction submitting to the jury the question of appellant’s right to recover over against its codefendant, the Water & Eight Company. In response to that contention, counsel for the Water & Eight Company have pointed out some apparently tenable objections to the form of appellant’s requested instruction upon that subject. However, we have nof deemed it necessary to give much attention to the form of the refused instruction. In the first place, in no event could appellant recover over against the Water & Eight Company, if the plaintiff was not entitled to recover against that company. In other words, unless the Water & Eight Company was guilty of negligence, as alleged, it was not liable to either the plaintiff or its codefend-ant, and the verdict of the jury in favor of the Water & Light Company, as against the plaintiff’s demand, involves a finding that that company was not guilty of negligence. That finding, if supported by testimony, eliminates appellant’s alleged right to recover over against its codefendant, and renders immaterial the fact that the alleged right to such recovery was not submitted to the jury.

[4] In the next place, this case does not come within the exception to the general rule, which denies to joint tort-feasors any right of recovery against each other. The proof shows that on the occasion in question the plaintiff, as an employs of the Telegraph & Telephone Company, was engaged, with other employSs, in removing a dead wire stretched overhead upon poles. Upon the same side of the street and in line with appellant’s telephone poles and wires, the Water & Light Company had its poles and wires. The poles of the one company were located between the poles of the other, and the wires of the Water & Light Company were located more than 20 feet above the sidewalk, and the telephone wires were more than 10 feet above the light wires. It had rained during the night previous to the plaintiff’s injury, and there is testimony tending to show that it was drizzling rain and damp at or about the time the plaintiff and his associates went to work. Under the directions of a foreman, whose position constituted him appellant’s vice principal, the plaintiff and two other employSs were furnished a rope and directed to take down the dead wire in question. That work was to be performed in part in the following manner: One man would ascend a telephone pole, fasten the rope to the end of the wire, and another man would ascend the next telephone pole and pull the wire to that pole; the wire being held up by the man on the other pole and by the use of the rope attached to the end of the wire. When the end of the wire reached the man on the other pole, the man holding the rope would drop it, and a man would ascend another pole, and it would be passed on. Soon after the crew started to work on the occasion in question, it became necessary for the plaintiff, in pur *1185 suance of his work, to drop the rope, in order that it might be taken up by the man on the next post. When the rope was dropped, it seems to have become entangled with an awning and an electric light wire, so that it could not he pulled on through. The plaintiff testified, and we find as a fact, that it was a part of his duty to relieve the rope from that entanglement, and, in performance of that duty; he ascended a pole belonging to the Water & Light Company and upon which the light wires were strung, and stepped off on a metal awning attached to a building, and caught the rope in one hand, whereupon he received an electric shock, which caused him to fall from the awning and sustain the injuries complained of.

The proof shows that the portion of the rope which was in contact with the electric light wire, and which plaintiff took hold of, was wet, which condition was caused by the rope having-been dragged on the wet ground by the plaintiff and his fellow servants in the performance of the work referred to. It was also alleged and proved that at the place where the rope was in contact with the electric light wire the insulation upon that wire had become worn and defective, and it was charged by the plaintiff and appellant that the other defendant was guilty of negligence in permitting the wire to be in that condition. At that time the wire in question was charged with and carrying about 2,200 volts of elec-trieity. The proof shows that an arrangement existed between the two defendants by which, if appellant had requested it, the Water & Light Company would have cut off and removed the current of electricity in its wires, while appellant’s employés were engaged in taking down and removing the dead wire from appellant’s poles. And the plaintiff charged in his petition that appellant was guilty of negligence in not requesting the Water & Light Company to cut off the electric current from its wires, before the plaintiff and his associates started work that morning, and the proof sustains that charge of negligence.

We also hold that the proof sustains the finding of the jury that the Water & Light Company was not guilty of negligence as to the plaintiff in permitting the insulation upon its wire to become defective. The wire in question was located so- far above the ground as to render it improbable that any one, other than the Water & Light Company’s employes, would come in contact with it at the place of such defective insulation; and if it pre- ' ferred to allow it to remain in that condition, and to cut off the current of electricity while its own employés were working near that place, we think the' jury had the right to hold that in so doing the Water & Light Com.pany was not guilty of negligence as to the plaintiff and other employés of appellant. The defective insulation referred to was near one of the poles belonging to the Water & Light Company; but was not near a pole belonging to appellant;.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 S.W. 1181, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-telegraph-telephone-co-v-sanders-texapp-1911.