Turner v. Tennessee Valley Electric Co-operative

288 S.W.2d 747, 40 Tenn. App. 54, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 100
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 5, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 288 S.W.2d 747 (Turner v. Tennessee Valley Electric Co-operative) 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
Turner v. Tennessee Valley Electric Co-operative, 288 S.W.2d 747, 40 Tenn. App. 54, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 100 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinions

BEJACH, J.

This cause involves an appeal by John S. Turner suing as next of kin of Louis Don Turner from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Hardin County, resulting from the granting of a peremptory instruction in favor of the Tennessee Yalley Electric Cooperative. The parties will be styled as in the lower court, plaintiff and defendant, the plaintiff being the plaintiff in error in this Court, and the defendant, the defendant in error here. The plaintiff sues as next of kin of Louis Don Turner, his son, who was electrocuted and killed when a live wire of the defendant came in contact with or arced to the boom of a crane, in connection with which plaintiff’s son was working.

At the time of the death of Louis Don Turner, also known as L. D. Turner, he was employed by ft. E. Martin, a contractor, as a member of a crew engaged in building .a bridge located a few miles northeast-of Savannah, Tennessee in Hardin County. The bridge under construction was a new bridge on what is known as the Cerro Gordo Road, leading from ■ Savannah to Cerro Gordo, — which bridge was over Horse Creek in the vicinity of an old mill known as Paulk’s Mill, and from which circumstance the bridge in question was known as Paulk’s Mill Bridge. . The bridge in question was a new bridge being erected several hundred feet up the creek from an old bridge in the same vicinity.

L. D. Turner, the deceased, at the time of his death was an unmarried, young man of the age of twenty-two years. He lived with his father and his sister and her child.

The defendant is a corporation engaged in the distribution of electric power to consumers in Hardin and Wayne Counties, Tennessee. It had erected and main[57]*57tained poles and power lines for the transmission of electricity in the vicinity of the Paulk’s Mill Bridge.

Sometime prior to the employment of personnel for building of the bridge here involved, and prior to commencement of work on same by the contractor, Mr. B. S. Walker, the contractor’s general manager, came to Savannah from his home in Nashville for the purpose of making preparation for moving his crew into the area, and employment of personnel for the job, and for other matters preliminary to the beginning of work. At that time he went to the office of Mr. Boh Guinn, Jr., an acquaintance who was also in the contracting business and a resident of Savannah. The purpose of his visit to Mr. Guinn was to seek advice as to the proper person to contact in order to have the power lines of the defendant removed before construction work started. Mr. Guinn went with Mr. Walker to Mr. Bay May, a local undertaker, who was president of the defendant corporation. Mr. May was advised that the contractor’s desire was to have the defendant remove certain power line wires located at and near the scene of the new bridge, in order to assure the safety of the construction employees, because there would be a crane and other machinery in operation by the contractor during the construction work. No specific time that such wires were to be removed was specified, but the request was for removal of same during the period of construction of the new bridge. Subsequent to the interview of Walker with Mr. May, B. E. Martin, the owner of the contracting-business which had the contract to build the bridge, also made a trip to Savannah for the purpose of looking over the ground and making necessary preparations for the commencement of work. At that time he, also, went to [58]*58the office of Mr. Bob Guinn, Jr., with whom he was acquainted. While there, Mr. May was called and arrangements made for a representative of the defendant to go with Mr. Martin and Mr. Guinn to the site of the proposed bridge. Pursuant to this request, a Mr. Light-foot, a representative of defendant, went with Mr. Guinn and Mr. Martin, or met them at the site of the proposed bridge. There the three men discussed the matter concerning the power line, and Mr. Martin requested Mr. Lightfoot to have the defendant take down its lines located at and near the site of the new bridge and move them completely off the right-of-way on the south or southeast side of the new right-of-way and new bridge, such request being made because of the danger to employees of the contractor, which would necessarily result from energized or “hot” power lines in the immediate vicinity of the construction work, because there would be a crane and other machinery in operation during the period. Such request for removal of the wires was made for the period of construction of the bridge.

After the interviews of B. S. Walker and of B. E. Martin and the representatives of the defendant corporation, the defendant did remove its electric lines completely from the area requested. Even the poles of defendant corporation were taken down and laid aside. Construction work was' started about the last week in March, 1952, at which time the contractor moved a skeleton crew into the area and commenced employment of local personnel to fill out the construction crew. The deceased was one of the local employees. At the time the construction crew moved on to the job, defendant’s wires were down. Construction continued until approximately May 24, 1952, at which time Martin’s crew left [59]*59the jo]) at Paullt’s Mill Bridge temporarily for construction of a concrete culvert or bridge some miles nearer to Cerro Gordo. Work on the Paulk’s Mill Bridge was thus suspended from May 24, 1952 until June 21, 1952. At that time the Paulk’s Mill Bridge was approximately thirty to forty percent complete, only the concrete abutments having been constructed and no steel having been laid on them. During this interval of about four weeks, while Martin’s men and machinery were away from the Paulk’s Mill Bridge construction, the defendant reerected its poles and wires and energized the wires. When the crew and machinery were returned to the Paulk’s Mill Bridge job, about June 21, 1952, the wires and poles of defendant had been re-erected and placed in the position which they occupied at the time of the death of plaintiff’s son, — one pole having been erected some nineteen feet inside the highway right-of-way, and another pole some two feet inside the highway right-of-way. The power lines were not insulated. When the crew resumed work on or about June 21, it was necessary to move the crane down next to the bridge on the north and northeast side of the creek. Due to the nature of the terrain, the crane had to be moved in on the upper or south or southwest side of the bridge, between the bridge under construction and the poles and Avires which had been reerected. At that time the crane came in contact with the wires, and the crane operator, as well as the superintendent on the job, then learned that the wires were energized or “hot”. But work was continued on this job with the crane in operation until the death of plaintiff’s intestate, which occurred August 13,1952. The replacement or reerection of the poles and wires and their subsequent maintenance in the energized or “hot” condition bv the defendant was all done without any notice by the defendant to either [60]*60Mr. Walker, Mr. Martin, or any other person connected with the employers of the plaintiff’s intestate; and this, in spite of the fact that specific request, had been made by both Mr. Walker and Mr. Martin for the poles and lines to be removed during the full period of construction. Also, no permission to erect and maintain the wires at that point was given by any representative of the State of Tennessee.

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W.2d 747, 40 Tenn. App. 54, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-tennessee-valley-electric-co-operative-tennctapp-1955.