Texas Electric Service Co. v. Holt

249 S.W.2d 662, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2177
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 9, 1952
Docket15321
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 249 S.W.2d 662 (Texas Electric Service Co. v. Holt) 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
Texas Electric Service Co. v. Holt, 249 S.W.2d 662, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2177 (Tex. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

EARL P. HALL, Chief Justice.

This appeal involves exceptions to the general rule that an employer is not liable for injuries sustained by an employee of an independent contractor.

Appellee Lillian Holt, individually and as guardian for her minor children, sued appellant Texas Electric Service Company in a district court of Tarrant County, claiming damages for fatal injuries sustained by her husband, Drexel Morgan Holt, Jr., on April 29, 1949. It was further alleged the deceased was working as a lineman in the employ of Aaby Construction Company, independent contractor, who was performing work for appellant.

The compensation carrier for Aaby Construction Company, American Mutual Liability Insurance Company intervened, seeking recoupment for payments made as a result of the death of Drexel Morgan Holt, Jr.

Trial was to a jury and as a result of their answers to certain special issues submitted the trial court rendered judgment against appellant and in favor of appellees, Mrs. Lillian Holt and her children, in a total sum of $66,000, out of which a judgment was rendered in favor of American Mutual Insurance Company as recoupment for its payments.

*664 • Appellant’s appeal consists of twenty-eight points, some of which refer to error of the trial court in overruling its motion for instructed verdict hased upon insufficiency of the evidence to establish a cause of action against it.

Appellant’s main contentions are that, under the law, an owner having work performed on his premises by an independent contractor is not ordinarily liable for injuries sustained by an employee of such contractor by the contractor’s own negligence or the negligence of a fellow employee, where the evidence fails to connect the owner with the negligence that caused the injury; employment of this particular independent contractor was for performance of work that was not dangerous to such independent contractor’s employees; at time of injury said employee of the independent contractor was not an invitee of appellant; and that the burden of bringing appellant within an exception to the general rule exempting an owner or employer from liability for injury received by the contractor’s employees rests upon appellees, the plaintiffs.

We note in 23 Tex.Jur., p. 563, sec. 17, under title of Independent Contractors, the following: “As to the contractor’s servants who may suffer injury, the employer or owner is not ordinarily liable unless the work was inherently dangerous or unless he has failed to provide a safe place to work and safe appliances. Where it clearly appears that the fault was that of the contractor alone, a recovery against the employer is not permitted. * * ' * ”

In discussing this point we will keep in mind only the testimony which is most favorable to the verdict. The undisputed evidence is that Aaby Construction Company was employed by appellant to install crossarms upon appellant’s poles and string one additional wire thereon for a distance of several miles. This new line or wire was to be strung and fuses or cutouts installed while said wire was free from electricity. The poles in question were already supporting a line carrying about 7,000 volts. Appellant’s employees were to remove this line from atop of said poles and place it on the other side of the new eight foot crossarms while said line was energized. They performed this work by using rubber gloves and other safety devices.

• On April 28, 1949, appellant’s superintendent supervising the job discussed with the independent .contractor, Mr. S. H. Aaby, the possibility of appellant’s energizing a small portion of the new line in order to re-stretch the old wire in the same area, to which plaintiff’s witness, Mr. Aaby, testified :

“Q. Where did you get your information ? (that the wire at the time and place in question was hot.) A. From the Texas Electric Service Company.
“Q. In what way, now? A. On the day of the 28th, our work in this particular section was completed. The Texas Electric Service Company had some work that they wanted to perform out there which would necessitate them making this new wire hot. The superintendent of construction discussed it with me and I told him we were all through working in that section — '
“A. I told him that as far as we’re concerned, we were through with our work in that particular section and it wouldn’t bother us. I also talked, that same day, to one of the foremen of the Texas Electric Service Company, and ■he told me that he had been informed by his superintendent that it would be all right to energize this new line, and he said, T will energize it in the morning.’
“A. * * * I discussed it with him and told him it would be all right. On the morning of the 29th, before our men left the base, at the foreman’s meeting in my office, we discussed the fact that that section of the line would be hot. Later that morning, when I went out on the job, I stopped and talked with the foreman of the Texas Electric and he, again, informed me that that line was hot.
“Q.- Then, what did you do with respect to your crew, if anything? A. *665 My foreman, Mr. Benson had also stopped, before I had and he informed him that that line was hot. We then went on up to the ¡boat works and completed our work which we had to do up there and at 1:25 that' day, our work, was completed * * * with the exception of installing three new cartridges. * * *

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Bluebook (online)
249 S.W.2d 662, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-electric-service-co-v-holt-texapp-1952.