Western Telephone Corp. of Texas v. McCann

69 S.W.2d 465
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 21, 1934
DocketNo. 9261.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 69 S.W.2d 465 (Western Telephone Corp. of Texas v. McCann) 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
Western Telephone Corp. of Texas v. McCann, 69 S.W.2d 465 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

SMITH, Justice.

This action was brought against the telephone company by Jack McCann and his five minor children for damages occasioned to them by the death, by lightning, of Mrs. Mc-Cann, the wife and mother of the plaintiffs. In a jury trial the plaintiffs recovered an aggregate sum of $15,000. The telephone company has brought writ of error. The plaintiff in error and defendants in error will be herein designated as appellant and appellees, respectively.

The McCanns resided north of Taft, in San Patricio county, in a small rented frame-house situated about 50 feet north of and facing a paved highway, running approximately east and west. Appellant’s telephone lines were strung on wooden poles, 20 feet high and about 180 feet apart, along the north edge of the highway. One of these poles was situated in front of the McCann home, about 36 feet distant. The home of one Nelson was situated about 400 feet west of and on a line with the McCann place.

The telephone line in front of the McCann *466 Rome consisted of two wires, one a through and the other a local wire. The local wire had formerly served telephone instruments in the McCann and Nelson homes. It came to a dead end in the living room of the Nelson home; the service having been discontinued and the instrument removed from both homes long prior to this accident, and before the McCanns moved into their place.

When in use, the instrument in the Mc-Cann pláce had been served by a “lead-in” wire, which may be designated here as a .“drop” wire, extending down from a connection with the local wire on the pole in front of the house. There is evidence that after the discontinuance of the service to the McCann home, the drop wire was disconnected at the pole from the local wire, and tied to the glass insulator carrying the local wire, in close proximity to the latter. It is undisputed, however, that at the time of the accident the drop wire was attached to, or at least was in contact with the local wire, at that insulator. It is conceded that at and long prior to the McCanns’ occupancy of the house, the terminus of the drop wire had been brought to a dead end upon a porcelain insulator spool spiked by an ordinary nail to the southwest corner of the McCann front porch, at the intersection of the corner post and the place or sill just below the eave of the porch. Appellant had knowledge of this situation.

The accident occurred during a heavy rain and' electrical storm. Some of the family were working with a stalled truck near the house. The evidence vaguely, but sufficiently shows that Mrs. McCann had stepped out of the west room onto the small front porch, presumably watching the activities at the truck. Her young daughter was holding open the screen of the front door, near her mother, who, presumably if not certainly, was near the porch post and the dead end of the drop wire attached thereto. At this juncture a terrific bolt of lightning struck the first telephone pole to the east of, and 180 feet from, the pole in front of the house, demolishing the pole and severing the through wire, one part of which was thrust upon the branches of a nearby pal-m, which thereafter died, apparently as a result of the contact. The local wire was not severed, or “burnt,” but sagged downward, intact. The first, second, and third line poles to the east of the one destroyed were split down to the ground on the south side of each. The sill, or 4x6 plate, of the Mc-Cann front porch, to which the dead end of the drop wire was attached at the intersection of sill and southwest corner supporting post, was split for a distance of three or four feet beginning at the insulator spool holding the dead end of the drop wire. (If Mrs. McCann was standing in the position indicated by the facts, her head was near and slightly below this dead end of the wire.) The facing and sill of the east side of the door to the front room, just behind Mrs. McCann, who was between it and the insulator spool, was “burst and torn loose” by the lightning, which also injured the screen of the door as it was held open by the daughter, who was knocked down and injured by the impact. A gas meter at the east end of the porch was injured. The lightning also penetrated the ground near the base of the demolished pole, unearthing a buried line of gas pipe which extended to and beyond the disturbed meter;

Now, as stated, at the moment of -the crash Mrs. McCann was standing or moving about on the west 'side of the porch near the dead end of the drop wire and between it and her daughter as the latter held the screen open. The testimony is vague concerning her precise position, or attitude, or movements. In the confusion following the shock, however, she was discovered prone on the ground, just off the west end of the porch, dead. -Lightning had contacted her head and breast, passing down the length of her body and through one of her feet. It made no impression upon the floor of the porch, or other objects in her immediate vicinity, except, as stated, upon the porch sill on one side of her and the screen and door on the other, upon her daughter, who was felled by the shock, and upon the gas meter at the far end -of the porch.

The jury found, in answer to special issues, that Mrs. McCann’s death did not result from the -act of God, or unavoidable accident, and was not contributed to by her bwn negligence ; that her death was caused by lightning conducted over appellant’s telephone line; that appellant negligently “left its telephone wire connected with plaintiffs’ residence or permitted it to be and remain connected therewith 'after the telephone had been removed, without having installed therewith a lightning arrester or having said line grounded or connected with the ground with a conductor of electricity,” which negligence proximately and directly caused her death.

Appellant put on much expert testimony, developing three theories upon which the accident could have happened, as follows:

“(1) A single discharge may have occurred and in its path to the ground may have divided into three paths, one leading to the tele *467 phone post that was demolished, another branch leading to the palm tree that was killed, and a third branch leading to the corner of the porch on which Mrs. McCann was standing.
“(2) Two discharges in rather rapid succession which the people in their excitement failed to notice; one striking the porch and killing Mrs. McCann and the other demolishing the telephone post.
“(3) The discharge could have hit the post and divided at the top of the post, one part following the post to the ground and demolishing it, the other part following the telephone wire to a second post, about 150 feet west of the post that was demolished, and from the second post following a wire leading to the corner of the porch on which Mrs. McCann was killed.”

The jury, by their findings, adopted the third theory, and appellant’s first proposition is, in effect, that appellees failed to support those findings by a preponderance of the evidence, and were therefore not entitled to recover ; that being the only theory pleaded by them. We have concluded that the evidence did support the jury’s findings and therefore overrule the first proposition, as well as the related second, third, and fourth propositions.

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69 S.W.2d 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-telephone-corp-of-texas-v-mccann-texapp-1934.