Town of Clinton v. Davis

177 S.W.2d 848, 27 Tenn. App. 29, 1943 Tenn. App. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 2, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 177 S.W.2d 848 (Town of Clinton v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Clinton v. Davis, 177 S.W.2d 848, 27 Tenn. App. 29, 1943 Tenn. App. LEXIS 126 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

Carter Leonard Davis, a minor twelve years and seven months of age, brought suit for damages on account of injuries received by him when he came in contact with an uninsulated high tension wire carrying 6900 volts of electricity while climbing a sycamore tree, after sycamore balls, located on the highway right-of-way in front of his home. The electric wires were owned and operated by the plaintiffs-in-error, Town of Clinton, Tennessee, and Clinton Power Commission, who were defendants below. His father also sued to recover medical and hospital expenses and for loss of his son’s services resulting from the accident. The cases were tried together and resulted in verdicts and judgments for the respective plaintiffs. We have before us the consolidated appeals of the defendants from the two judgments.

The only alleged error relied upon in- plaintiffs-in-error’s assignments on appeal and in their brief is that *32 the trial judge refused to grant defendants’ motion for a directed verdict in each, case at the close of all the evidence and that the judgments are excessive. We have, therefore, no occasion to consider the charge to the jury or rulings during the progress of the trial.

The father’s action being dependent upon the right of the son to recover, we shall hereafter refer to the son as the plaintiff and the- Town of Clinton, Tennessee, and Clinton Power Commission as the defendant.

On June 21, 1941, the plaintiff lived with Ms father, mother,' two brothers and a sister in a rented home located on Lost Bottom Road in Anderson County, Tennessee, about one mile south of Clinton, Tennessee. The Lost Bottom Road runs in a general westwardly direction from U. iS. Highway 25W. At the intersection of Lost Bottom Road and IT. S. Highway 25W is a small neighborhood store. The plaintiff’s home is less than 500 feet from this store. In- the neighborhood in which the plaintiff lives are twenty or twenty-five other homes in which children live. Not far from the plaintiff’s home is a school which is located on Lost Bottom Road and is attended by 300 or 400 students. The defendant is the owner of an electric power line that runs down the Lost Bottom Road in the right-of-way across the road in front of the plaintiff’s home. This electric power line is strung on poles about 190 feet apart. The poles are 30 feet long and are set 4% feet into the ground. On each pole there is a fin crossarm 44 inches in length and 8 inches from the top of the pole. On these crossarms, attached to insulators, are two uninsulated copper wires spaced 36 inches apart, one of which carries no voltage and the other carries 6900 volts of electricity. This is the primary circuit.

*33 Below the primary circuit there is a secondary circuit consisting of three wires strung from pole to pole and attached to a vertical rack fastened to each pole so that the wires are one above the other. It is 24 inches from the bottom wire to the top wire of the secondary circuit. It is 4% feet from the top wire'of the secondary circuit to the wires on the crossarms composing the primary circuit. The middle wire of the secondary circuit is a neutral wire and the top and bottom wires each carry 115 volts of electricity. By connecting the top and bottom wires of the secondary circuit the voltage becomes 230 volts, which is the voltage used in homes which have both electric lights and electric ranges. 115 volts is the voltage used for an electric range without electric lighting and for electric lighting without a range. Prom this secondary line wires led into the plaintiff’s home for lighting purposes only.

The poles to which this line of electric wires is attached are set 4 feet from the fence in the highway right-of-way at the place of this accident.. A number of trees of varying sizes are growing up between these poles and under and through these wires. Among these trees is a sycamore tree which is about 35 or 40 feet tall and about 12 inches in diameter at the base. The lower limb of this sycamore tree is a little over 6 feet from the ground. This tree had various vines growing up1 around it and it was bearing sycamore balls. These electric wires ran through the branches of this sycamore tree. The branches and limbs were grown up around the secondary line but some of the limbs had been cut from around the primary line. The testimony is conflicting as to how near the primary line came to the trunk of the tree. The testimony is likewise conflicting as to whether or not these *34 primary wires could be seen in this 'tree from the ground under the tree. "Where the wires ran through the tree the primary wires were about 23 feet above the ground while the secondary wires were some 4 feet lower. The plaintiff knew the wires ran along the road but. says he thought they went around the tree. There are other witnesses who state the location of these wires could not be' seen from certain positions in the road. It might be observed that an adult or one going’ there for the .purpose would be much more apt to observe the wires than would a small boy who was intent in his play not knowing’ or thinking of high tension electric wires. There were no signs or notice that high tension electric wires ran through these trees or were strung on these poles. The fact that these wires ran into the home of the plaintiff and furnished lights therein was not notice to him of their danger.

On the morning of June 21, 1941, the plaintiff and his younger brother were playing under this sycamore tree— throwing sycamore balls at each other. "When they ran out of sycamore balls the plaintiff climbed this sycamore tree after more sycamore balls. He had pulled off some balls and was standing on his left foot on a limb near the trunk of the tree holding to another limb with his right hand when he reached out with his left hand, a little above his shoulder, for more balls but remembered nothing after reaching for these last balls. He was barefooted and his only clothing was a pair of bathing trunks.

The only logical assumption is that when he reached out with his left hand after more balls this left hand came in contact with the uninsulated 6900 volt electric wire and he received injuries hereinafter detailed. His small brother called his mother and other neighbors soon *35 arrived and his unconscious or semi-conscious body was taken from the tree and to the Davis home. The doctor soon arrived and found the plaintiff had received “apparently electrical burns. There were severe burns on the left hand and forearm; on the left knee and thigh; and right thigh; those were third degree burns of the left hand and knee and sole of the foot; in the left hand the bones were exposed and tendons destroyed.”

,A third degree burn destroys the flesh and tendons and is the severest of burns. As a result of these burns it was necessary to amputate everything on the left hand except the middle finger. The doctor testified at the trial if they had known it would be in the condition it then was they would have likewise amputated the middle finger because the stub would have been more serviceable than the hand was as it was left. The plaintiff was in the hospital 35 days at first and 10 days at a later period. It was necessary to cut skin from parts of the body and graft it to the other parts of the body that were burned.

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Bluebook (online)
177 S.W.2d 848, 27 Tenn. App. 29, 1943 Tenn. App. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-clinton-v-davis-tennctapp-1943.