Western Telephone Corp. v. McCann

99 S.W.2d 895, 128 Tex. 582, 1937 Tex. LEXIS 411
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1937
DocketNo. 6770
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 99 S.W.2d 895 (Western Telephone Corp. v. McCann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Telephone Corp. v. McCann, 99 S.W.2d 895, 128 Tex. 582, 1937 Tex. LEXIS 411 (Tex. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Judge GERMAN

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

This case involves a judgment for $15,000.00 in favor of defendants in error, Jack McCann and his five minor children, against plaintiff in error, Western Telephone Corporation of Texas. The judgment was for damages on account of the death of Mrs. Sarah McCann, the wife and mother of defendants in error. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment of the district court. 69 S. W. (2d) 465. The parties will be designated as in the trial court.

Mrs. McCann was killed by a stroke of lightning August 26, 1932, while standing on the porch of her home near Taft, Texas, and during a rain and electrical storm. The McCann house was situated about 50 feet north of and facing a paved highway, running approximately east and west. Defendant owned a telephone line, which was strung on wooden poles 30 feet high and [584]*584about 180 feet apart. One of these poles, referred to as pole “X,” was almost directly in front of the McCann house and about 36 feet distant from the front porch. The telephone line in front of the McCann house consisted of two wires, one a “through” wire, and the other a “local” wire. The through wire was attached to the poles by means of wooden brackets with a glass insulator at the end of the brackets. These brackets were on the south side of the poles next to the highway. The local wire was attached to the poles in the same way, the brackets being on the north side of the poles. The through wire was above the local wire, the two being separated about two feet. The local wire had formerly served two telephone instruments, one in the McCann house and the other in the Nelson house, some 400 feet west of the McCann house. At the time of the occurrence in question the local wire came to a dead end in the living room of the Nelson home. Both telephones had been disconnected a considerable time prior to the date Mrs. McCann was killed. The telephone instrument in the McCann house had been connected with the local wire by a “drop” wire extending from pole “X” in front of the house. It is undisputed that at the time of the occurrence in question the telephone instrument had been removed, and this drop wire terminated at a porcelain insulator spool spiked with an ordinary nail just under the eaves of the roof of the front porch, at the southwest corner of the porch. The spool was attached to the plate of the roof, which plate appears to have been a plank 2 inches thick by 10 or 12 inches wide and approximately 8 feet in length. This plate rested upon a wooden post at the southwest corner of the porch, which post was about 6 or 7 feet high and rested upon the floor just above a concrete block. The drop wire appears to have been fastened to the spool by being wrapped around same and its end was exposed. There was no ground wire or other connection between the drop wire and the ground. While the evidence sharply conflicted, yet it will be taken as a fact that the drop wire was in contact with the local wire or connected with it in some manner.

At the time Mrs. McCann was killed a severe bolt of lightning struck the telephone pole east of and 180 feet from the pole in front of the McCann house. The pole that was struck is referred to as pole “A.” It was shattered to within about 2 feet of the ground. The through wire, that is the wire at or near the top of the pole, was severed. The local wire was not broken or burned, but was caused to sag. One end of the [585]*585severed wire was thrown upon a palm tree some distance from pole “A,” and this palm tree later died. The first, second and third telephone poles east of the one which was destroyed were split on the south side; that is on the side where the through line was suspended. The telephone pole in front of the house was not injured, nor was there any sign of burning on the drop line or at its end where the current is alleged by plaintiffs to have left the wire. There was no disturbance whatever in the Nelson home where the local wire came to a dead end on a table in the living room. There was some testimony to the effect that the plate on the porch where the spool was attached by a nail was split. A photograph of this plate, showing the spool, was offered in evidence without objection, and it appears from the testimony that it showed the condition as it was shortly after Mrs. McCann’s death. This photograph does not show anything more on the outside of the plate than a small crack some 12 inches in length. It is undisputed that the nail which attached the spool to the plate was in place and the spool appeared to have been practically undisturbed. There was some testimony to the effect that on the inside of the plate there was a crack in samp which indicated that something had passed through the board. The porch post immediately under the spool was undisturbed. The proof does not show with exactness just where Mrs. McCann was standing when struck by the lightning, but she was somewhere near the west end of the porch, between the> post at the corner of the porch and the door to the west room. So far as can be ascertained with any degree of certainty her head was perhaps within 3 or 4 feet of the porch plate at the place where the spool was attached, she being on the inside of the porch, while the spool was on the outside of the plate. Immediately after the stroke of lightning referred to Mrs. McCann was found on the ground just off the west end of the porch and was dead. Her small daughter, who had been standing between her and the door to the west room, was shocked and the screen door to the west room was damaged.

The theory of plaintiffs is that the bolt of lightning which struck pole “A” 180 feet east of the pole in front of the house, and which severed the through line, in some manner surcharged the local line with a current of electricity, which current coursed westward to pole “X” in front of the house, where it left the local wire and surcharged the drop wire, with which it coursed to the end of that wire at the spool; that it then left the end of the wire, going through the porch plate at somewhat of an [586]*586angle, then “jumped” to Mrs. McCann’s head, and from her body passed through the little girl to the screen door. The alleged negligence on the part of defendant was the leaving of the drop wire connected with the local wire, with its end exposed, so situated that it might become surcharged with atmospheric electricity and in that way became an instrument of danger and destruction. The negligence of the defendant is admitted, and that question need not be discussed. Defendant in its application for writ of error has clearly defined and limited the question to be determined by the following statement:

“Plaintiff in error contends that under all evidence submitted in this case, and where there is any conflict in the evidence whatever, taking the evidence of the plaintiffs in the court below, that it is insufficient as a matter of law to show any liability on the part of the plaintiff in error for the death of Mrs. McCann. The outstanding fact in this case is that the immediate, moving and efficient cause .of the death of Mrs. McCann was an act of God, a tremendous bolt of lightning, and that only by the merest conjecture, without any evidence of substantial nature to support it, can any act of omission of the plaintiff in error be considered as contributing in any -way to her death.” '

It is admitted that Mrs. McCann was killed by lightning. It is claimed by plaintiff that the stroke of lightning which killed Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
99 S.W.2d 895, 128 Tex. 582, 1937 Tex. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-telephone-corp-v-mccann-tex-1937.