Texas Power & Light Co. v. Culwell

19 S.W.2d 816, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 874
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 30, 1929
DocketNo. 10411.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 19 S.W.2d 816 (Texas Power & Light Co. v. Culwell) 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. Culwell, 19 S.W.2d 816, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 874 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

JONES, 'c. J.

Iona Culwell, the surviving wife of Clyde Key Culwell, S. L. Culwell and his wife, Mrs. S. L. Culwell, the surviving parents of Clyde Key Culwell, instituted suit in the district court of Ellis county against the Texas Power & Light Company, appellant, to recover damages for the death of Clyde Key Culwell. At the time of the filing of this suit, the plaintiffs were the only persons entitled to institute such suit. After the filing of the first amended original petition, a daughter was born to appellee Iona Culwell, and a plea of intervention was filed by the mother, as next friend for this infant daughter, given the name Juanita Ruth. The trial resulted in a judgment in favor of the ' mother, Mrs. Iona Culwell, for $7,500, and in favor of the infant daughter, Juanita Ruth Culwell, for the sum of $5,000. No recovery was allowed in favor of decedent’s father and mother, and they have not appealed from the judgment. Appellant has duly appealed from the judgment and has brought same to this court for review.

The facts necessary to an understanding of the issues involved are as follows: The death of Clyde Key Culwell occurred in the town of Midlothian, Ellis county, Tex.,, on July 27, 1927. At that time he was operating a tailor shop in said town, and also doing cleaning and pressing, and was earning about $125 per month. He was 21 years of age, and his wife at that time 18 years of age. Juanita Ruth Culwell was born October 4, 1927, and *818 was a child of the marriage of the deceased ■and Iona Culwell. The other plaintiffs were the father and mother of deceased. Appellant was engaged in the business of manufacturing, producing, and generating electricity for commercial purposes, and supplied the inhabitants of the town of Midlothian with electric power for the various purposes for which such power may be used. Dee’s Hardware Store in said town was furnished with power for electric lighting and for the ■operation of an electric motor. Such power was carried to the hardware store by means of a 225-voltage wire constructed and owned by appellant. This electric wire entered the Dee building in the rear and was constructed about 20 feet above the ground. Deceased’s tailoring business was carried on in a building adjoining this hardware store; this building was used by him jointly with M. P. Moore, who operated a plumbing business in the same building. This building did not cover the entire lot, there being a considerable space in the rear that was vacant, but which space was used and controlled by deceased and Moore in the conduct of their business. The evidence does not disclose how long this electric power wire that entered the Dee building had been constructed, other than that it was there some seven or eight years previous to deceased’s death. A Mrs. Henderson occupied a building adjoining the building used by Cul-well, and some five or six years previous to the fatal occurrence in question, Mrs. Henderson had constructed a wire that entered the rear and upper part of her building, as an aerial to a radio set owned and operated by her. This wire was of standard make and in common use for such purposes. Near where the power wire entered the Dee building, this radio wire crossed the power wire about 2 feet above it. This radio wire was a copper uninsulated wire. July- 27, 1927, was a day of intermittent showers of rain in the town of Midlothian, accompanied by some display •of electricity. About 30 minutes previous to the fatal injury to deceased, a shower of rain was falling during which there occurred, what is described as a “heavy clap of thunder.” Just previous to the accident, the deceased was seen by Moore to pass out the rear door of their building with a bundle in his hand, which he thought was clothing. In the rear of this building, the deceased had constructed a wire to use as. a clothesline, ■ on which he would hang clothes that had been ■cleaned. Not exceeding 2 minutes- after deceased’s exit from the rear door, Moore heard some one groaning, instantly rushed out of ■the rear door, and saw deceased lying upon his back about 9 or 10 feet from this rear ■door. Moore, who was an experienced electrician, at once discovered that deceased had come in contact with a live electric wire, which was grasped in his right hand, loosely held in his left, and extended over his chest. As soon as possible, with due care for his own safety, Moore disconnected the wire from deceased and immediately carried him into his place of business, when medical attention was at once given him and restoratives, which proved unavailing, were applied. The wire that deceased came in contact with and that caused his death was a portion of the Henderson aerial wire, which had become severed near where it connected with the Henderson building and had fallen across the 225-Volt electric wire that entered the hardware building, and extended to the ground, where Cul-well was found. This detached radio wire became charged with a deadly current of electricity through its contact with appellant’s wire that entered the Dee’s Hardware Store. Deceased’s contact with this broken radio wire thus charged was the cause of his death.

The undisputed evidence established the fact that the insulation on appellant’s wire had become worn or broken to such an extent that the wire in many places was without any insulation whatever, and was in such condition that an uninsulated wire that should come in contact with appellant’s • wire, especially if the contact was made at a place bare of insulation, would become charged with electricity. The undisputed evidence further established the fact that a properly insulated wire, which carried the voltage that was carried by the wire in question, would be safe from escape of electricity to an uninsulated wire or other object coming in contact therewith. In other words, it was established by undisputed proof that, if appellant’s wire entering the hardware store had been properly insulated, there would hfive been no charge of electricity communicated to the broken radio wire, and contact with such wire by Culwell would have been made with perfect safety to himself. The evidence does not disclose the cause of the breakage of the radio wire on the occasion in question, other than what might be concluded by inference from the attendant circumstances. The ground in the rear of deceased’s place of business had become damp and muddy at the time deceased met his death. This condition of the ground was partially due to the rain that had fallen, and partially due to the fact that deceased and some other parties emptied waste water on this ground, though at the specific place in the rear of this building, where deceased’s body was lying when discovered, he did not empty his waste water.

Appellee’s petition, together with the trial amendment filed under leave of the court, alleged very fully various acts of negligence on the part of appellant, including allegations to the effect that appellant was guilty of negligence, because it maintained and used the wire in question without proper insulation; and because of a failure to maintain the insulation in a proper and safe condition. This pleading forms a sufficient basis for the affirmative issues submitted by the *819 court to the jury, and is a sufficient basis for tbe judgment entered.

A number of appellant’s special exceptions were sustained to portions of appellee’s pleadings, and tbis ruling of tbe court required tbe filing of the trial amendment by appellee, curing the defects in said pleading.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W.2d 816, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 874, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-power-light-co-v-culwell-texapp-1929.