Texas Power & Light Co. v. Burger

166 S.W. 680, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 401
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 11, 1914
DocketNo. 7115.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 166 S.W. 680 (Texas Power & Light Co. v. Burger) 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 Power & Light Co. v. Burger, 166 S.W. 680, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 401 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

On July 27, 1912, while apellee and others as employés of appellant, were engaged in lifting and setting an electric light pole in the city of Hillsboro, Tex., appellee was seriously injured. The work was done with the assistance of pike poles,., and what was called a “crutch” or “jenny.” The pike poles were about 2 inches in diameter and about 12 or 14 feet in length. In one end of them there was fitted a sharp-iron spike. When the pole was raised to-about the height of the men’s heads, or a *681 little higher, the -men using the pike poles struck the iron spikes into the electric light pole, and, grasping the pike pole with their hands, pushed said light pole upward. As the electric light pole was thus being raised, the man with the jenny would slide it down so that the pole at intervals, could rest upon it, and the men engaged in raising it with the pike poles could rest. The crutch or jenny was principally of wood constructed with a cross at the top. The crotch of the cross was lined with an iron band in the shape of a half moon or crescent. Sharp teeth protrude from the bottom, and from the upper end of the cross. When the pole being raised fits into the crotch of the jenny, the sharp teeth thereof stick into the wood and keep the pole from slipping or turning. On the occasion in question, there were four men using pike poles, one to guide and place the jenny, and one who stood at the hole to keep a board in place, which prevented the butt end of the electric light pole from slipping past the hole, and which caused it to slide into the hole when raised to a sufficient height. The pole being raised when appellee was hurt was the largest and heaviest pole that he was ever called upon to assist in raising. He had been in the employ of the appellant for some time before this, but the poles Im had theretofore been required to aid in raising were smaller and lighter poles, probably not over 25 or 30 feet long. At the time appellee was injured Hall Calhoun, appellant’s foreman, who had authority to employ and discharge men, was present, and controlled and directed appellee and the other employes in the work they were then doing. The jenny furnished by appellant and being used in raising the pole when ap-pellee was injured was too small. The pole would not fit down into the crotch of the cross, so as to be caught and held by the teeth in the bottom thereof, and hence the cross and the teeth could not perform the functions for which they were created. The evidence also warrants the conclusion that one of the pike poles, but not the one being used by appellee, was equipped with a loose pike or spike, which, when the man handling it went to change his hold and shift it to another place, would remain sticking in the pole, and would have to be shaken out. This caused delay, and kept the strain on the ap-pellee and other men an undue length of time. In addition to this, one of the men using a pike pole had sore hands, each of them being blistered, which was known to appel-' lant’s foreman, Calhoun, before appellee was hurt, but unknown to appellee until after-wards. When the pole had been raised to an angle of about 45 degrees and just ready for the last push upwards by which it would 'feo down into the hole, it twisted and swerved, and an undue amount of its weight was thrown on appellee, causing him to be injured in part at least as alleged ,in his petition. Appellee had received an injury some years before this, from which he suffered very much, as he has from the injury complained of in this suit. He had, however, at the time of the present injury, seemingly recovered from his former injury. He had been doing for a long time, intervening between the first and second injury, the hardest and heaviest kind of work, requiring great lifting and straining, without complaint, and was before the injury here complained of, far above men of average strength. The grounds of negligence alleged are: (1) Failure of appellant to furnish appellee a reasonably safe place to work; (2) failure to furnish reasonably safe tools and implements with which to perform the work being done when appellee was injured; (3) in requiring and directing appellee to raise the electric light pole by the means employed; (4) in not furnishing a sufficient number of competent men to perform the work of raising the pole by the means and manner required with safety; (5) that one of appellee’s colaborers had sore hands, and was not, by reason thereof, physically fit to give proper assistance in raising the pole. The defenses pleaded are: (1) General and special demurrers; (2) general denial; (3) negligence of fellow servant; (4) that at the time of the alleged accident, on July 27, 1912, the plaintiff was not physically sound, but, on the contrary, was a cripple, having long prior thereto, to wit, on the 17th day of December, 1909, received serious and permanent injuries to his spine and hip, resulting in a curvature of his spine, severe pains and convulsions, and paralysis of his left leg, etc., which were the same identical injuries of which the plaintiff now complained, and which were due to the injury received in December, 1909, and not due to any fault or negligence of said defendant on the occasion in question; (5) contributory negligence; (6) assumed risk; (7) that the injury, if any, received by the plaintiff July 27, 1912, was the result of an accident. A trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the appellee for the sum of $3,000, and appellant appealed.

At the threshold of this appeal we are confronted with a motion made by appellee to strike out certain portions of appellant’s brief, because the same are not in compliance with the rules. This motion, especially -for the reason that we have concluded the case ought to be affirmed, will be overruled.'

[1] Appellant’s assignments of error from the first to the fifth, inclusive, complain respectively of the court’s refusal to peremptorily instruct the jury to return a verdict in its favor; in charging the jury that it was appellant’s duty to exercise ordinary care to furnish, while appellee was engaged in the work he was doing when hurt, reasonably safe tools and implements with which to perform that work; and in submitting to the *682 jury as grounds of negligence upon which appellee might recover: (1) The failure of appellant to furnish reasonably safe pike poles and raising erutch or jenny with which to perform the work in which appellee was engaged when injured; (2) the failure of appellant to exercise ordinary care to furnish appellee with assistants of sufficient number and competency to do the work he was doing when hurt with reasonable safety to himself; and (3) the direction of appellee and his colaborers by J. H. Calhoun, appellant’s vice principal, to raise and place in position the electric light pole as alleged in appellee’s petition, in the manner in which it was raised. The proposition urged under these assignments, aside from a number of abstract propositions of law which we deem it unnecessary to state, is to the effect that the evidence fails to show that the injury to ap-pellee was directly • and proximately caused, either, by the defective pike pole or jenny, the failure of the appellant to furnish the plaintiff assistants of sufficient number and competency to do the work assigned him, or by the appellant’s negligent manner of raising the electric light pole. We think there was no error in the submission of these issues.

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.W. 680, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-power-light-co-v-burger-texapp-1914.