Walpole v. Tennessee Light & Power Co.

89 S.W.2d 174, 19 Tenn. App. 352, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 20, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 89 S.W.2d 174 (Walpole v. Tennessee Light & Power Co.) 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
Walpole v. Tennessee Light & Power Co., 89 S.W.2d 174, 19 Tenn. App. 352, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 47 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

CROWNOVER, J.

This cause should be styled Tennessee Light & Power Company, Plaintiff in Error, y. Watt Walpole, Defendant in Error, as judgment was rendered in the lower court in favor of Watt Walpole and the power' company appealed in error to this court.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries averred to have been caused by the negligent manner in which defendant constructed and maintained its electric power transmission line, which resulted in plaintiff’s being burned by electricity.

Defendant pleaded the general issue of not guilty.

The action was tried by the judge and a jury. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence and again at the conclusion of all the evidence, defendant moved the court for a directed verdict in its favor, which motions were overruled. The jury returned a verdict of $2,000 in favor of the plaintiff, and judgment was entered accordingly.

Motion for a new trial having been overruled, defendant appealed to this court, and has assigned errors which raise ,only two propositions :

(1) There was no evidence of negligence on the part of defendant, and the court erred in not directing a verdict in its favor.

(2) The plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.

The defendant, Tennessee Light & Power Company, is a corporation engaged in the manufacture and distribution of electricity. It has a plant at Springfield, Tennessee, and one of its transmission lines extends from Springfield to Adairsville, Kentucky, a line of poles and high-tension wires being placed along the Adairsville pike. It is successor to the Davidson Light & Power Company, which company was granted a franchise by Robertson county to erect ¿ power line on that highway in 1923; the right of way at that time being 50 feet wide.

In October, 1928, the state of Tennessee having taken over the highway, the state highway department widened the right of way, making it 60 feet wide, and required the power company to move its poles back about 5 feet.

The Springfield to Adairsville pike leads approximately north and south. The transmission line is on the east side until it reaches a point about 400 yards south of Mrs. Miles’ residence, when it crosses the pike and extends along the west side.

The poles were chestnut posts with two cross-arms on each, 5 feet wide. The upper line consisted of three wides and carried a current of 13,000 volts. This line was 23 feet 1 inch from the ground. The lower line of wires carried a current of 2,300 volts and was placed *354 18 feet 9J4 inches from the ground. The wires were not insulated. Danger or warning signs were placed on some of the posts.

Mrs. Bessie Miles lives on the Adairsville pike, 3 miles from Springfield, on the east side. There is a well on Mrs. Miles’ property, on the opposite side or west side of the highway from her residence, near the right of way. In 1914 she erected a house over the well and installed a pump in it, which was operated by electricity, and pumped water into her house. At this time Mrs. Miles had a private electric line from Springfield, which the company bought when it erected this-line on the Adairsville pike.

The well house is approximately 10x11 feet, 8 feet to the eaves, 10 or 12 feet to the comb of the roof!' When the electric line was-moved back in 1928, it was placed 9 feet and 3 inches from the well house and 23 feet and 1 inch above the ground. The water in the well is 30 feet below the surface of the ground. Two wires from the power line led to an electric motor in well house to-furnish power to operate the pump.

On May 12, 1932, Mrs. Miles engaged Forrest Whiting, a plumber, to install a new automatic electric driven pump. Whiting carried his helper, Watt Walpole, the plaintiff, with him to Mrs. Miles’ home. After installing the pump in the basement, they crossed the road to the well house.

There are several trees close to the well house and one on the right of way. T-he branches of these trees completely concealed the wires for a space of about 25 feet near the well. Standing at the door of the well house and looking up, no wires could be seen, but the line of poles and wires further up and down the road could be seen.

There was an old pump in the well, and about 27 feet of iron pipe in two sections, one 20 feet and one 7j4, were used to pump the water. The head of the pump rested on heavy timbers placed across the top of the well. This pump and old pipe had to be removed in order to put in new pipe to connect with the new pump-installed in Mrs. Miles’ basement. Whiting and plaintiff, Walpole,, disconnected the pump and moved it. The pipe consisted of a 20-foot long section and a piece 7J4 feet long; it was old and rusty. In order to get the pipe out of the well, it was necessary to make1 a hole in the roof and push the pipe through it. This was the way in which the pipe was always taken from the well when necessary to replace it. Walpole knocked several shingles from the roof, on the east side (towards the highway), which were loose, as they had been removed for this purpose prior to this time, and they lifted the pipe from the water, pushing it through the roof. When they had lifted the 20-foot piece from the water they did not disconnect it from the 7j4-foot piece, the joint being rusty, but lifted the *355 whole 27¿4 feet of pipe out in one piece, which caused the pipe to stand 27 J4 feet above the ground, and rested the end of it on a plank.

Whiting then stood by the side of the pipe with it resting against his shoulder, and directed Walpole to remove a plank from the west side of the house for the pipe to be taken through, as trees had grown up in front of the door. Walpole went out of the door, which was in the south end of the house, and went to the west side and removed a plank. Whiting had told him he would hand the lower end of the pipe out to him. Whiting, on the inside of the pump house, raised the 27)4 feet of pipe, rested it on his shoulder, and stepped from the piece of timber to the wet ground. Whiting’s face flushed and he stumbled or fell toward Walpole, and the lower end of the pipe was pushed through the opening in the wall, and Walpole, thinking he had merely stumbled, undertook to catch the lower end of the pipe. The upper end of the pipe had been turned towards and touched the 13,000 volt line, and, when Whiting stepped on the wet ground, this caused a ground connection of the electric current through his body, and he was instantly killed. Walpole did not catch the pipe, but his left wrist struck it and he was thrown 10 or 15 feet and rendered unconscious. His left wrist was so badly burned that it became necessary to amputate it several inches below the elbow.

Watt Walpole was a man about 31 years of age, a laborer and plumber’s helper. He lived in the town of Springfield. He had never been on Mrs. Miles’ property before. He had never lived or worked in this vicinity. He did not know that this line of high-tension wires was along the highway.

He did not see the wires as he crossed the road, and, when he reached the well house, he could not have seen them if he had looked because of the trees and the leaves on the trees. He says that prior to this he had seen the line of wires but thought they were telephone wires.

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.W.2d 174, 19 Tenn. App. 352, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walpole-v-tennessee-light-power-co-tennctapp-1935.