Wilson v. Electric Power Board

544 S.W.2d 92, 1976 Tenn. LEXIS 512
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 544 S.W.2d 92 (Wilson v. Electric Power Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Electric Power Board, 544 S.W.2d 92, 1976 Tenn. LEXIS 512 (Tenn. 1976).

Opinions

OPINION

HARBISON, Justice.

This action for personal injuries was instituted by a lineman and by his wife for electrical burns which he sustained while undertaking to repair a transmission line. The line and a pole had been broken by a falling tree during an ice storm. The trial jury found in favor of the plaintiffs, petitioners here. The Court of Appeals reversed and dismissed, holding that the respondent Power Board was entitled to a directed verdict. It found no evidence of breach of duty by the respondent to the petitioner Wilson and also held that he was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.

Our review of the record leads us to the conclusion that, taking the evidence in its most favorable light to the petitioners, a jury issue was presented as to the negligence of the respondent and as to the contributory negligence of the petitioner. The case was an extremely close one, however, and we find that the instructions given by the trial judge as to the duty owed by the respondent to the petitioner was erroneous, and that the charge failed properly to delineate the issues to be resolved by the jury. Accordingly we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and remand the case to the trial court for a new trial.

On January 9, 1973, petitioner Roy Wilson, a lineman for Dillard Smith Construction Company, sustained electrical burns while working on respondent’s transmission lines. Petitioner and other employees of Dillard Smith, under the supervision of their foreman, Sherman Sherrill, were dispatched by radio from the Power Board to remove a tree and make necessary repairs to broken lines on Lookout Mountain near Chattanooga. Although the contract between Dillard Smith Construction Company and the Power Board is not in evidence, there was testimony that such a contract existed, and that Dillard Smith was performing the work as an independent contractor “under its own clearance”. According to the testimony, this term meant that the employees of the contractor were responsible for working on the lines in an energized condition or were required to take their own measures to ground the wires or otherwise de-energize them, and that the wires were not de-energized by the Power Board as would be done when the contractor was working under a “cut-off” order.

The Power Board advised the repair crew where switches and controls in the vicinity were located. Late in the afternoon on January 8, 1973 the crew found the trouble site, and thereupon the foreman, petitioner Wilson and other employees went to the poles upon which the controls were situated.

Two sets of lines were involved, the higher lines containing twelve thousand volts and the lower lines four thousand volts. An employee of the construction company climbed the pole upon which clamps were located controlling the twelve thousand volt lines, and he loosened these clamps so as to de-energize these lines.

Upon a separate and different pole, fuses had been installed by the Power Board by means of which the four thousand volt lines could be de-energized. Neither the petitioner nor any other employee of Dillard Smith Construction Company climbed the pole upon which these fuses were situated. Petitioner and his foreman inspected these fuses from the ground, and saw that fuse boxes on the four thousand volt lines were in an open position. Prom this they as[94]*94sumed either that someone from the Power Board had preceded them to the site and opened the fuses, or that the fuses had opened automatically, so as to de-energize the line. Because of ice, snow and poor visibility, petitioner and other members of the crew failed to observe that there were two sets of fuses on these four thousand volt lines, one of which was referred to in the record as a “knifeblade” fuse, which could only be opened or disconnected manually.

After ascertaining to their satisfaction that all lines had been de-energized, the crew proceeded to remove a broken pole farther toward the terminus of the line, reset it, splice the broken wires and replace them. They worked until after midnight on January 8 and returned to the site the next morning at about 8:30 to complete their work. On this occasion the foreman again walked down the line to the poles where the controls were situated. He ascertained that the “hot clamps” on the high voltage lines were still open and that the fuse boxes on the four thousand volt lines were still in an open position. Again, because of ice, snow and fog he failed to observe the knife blade switches on the latter set of lines.

Petitioner Wilson climbed the new pole which had been set the night before, and was undertaking to fasten one of the four thousand volt lines in place when he sustained the injuries complained of. He testified that he “fuzzed” the line with his hammer before handling it, and that it produced no spark. However, the line was either energized at that time or became energized shortly thereafter, and the petitioner sustained electrical shock and burn while attempting to lift the ice-coated wire into position.

Sharp issues as to contributory negligence were made, there being testimony that numerous safety devices and practices could have been utilized by the repair crew to prevent electrical shock even while working on energized lines.

There was testimony offered on behalf of petitioner, however, that it was unusual in the Chattanooga area for the Power Board to maintain lines with a dual set of fuses or switches such as were involved in the present case. While the “knife blade” switches and the wires leading to them were ordinarily visible from the ground, there is material evidence that they were not visible under the icy, foggy weather conditions obtaining on the night of January 8 and on the morning of January 9. To this extent, therefore, the Court of Appeals did not view the evidence most favorably to the petitioner when it stated that:

“The uncontroverted evidence shows that all the switches were obvious and plainly visible to the plaintiff and his fellow employees.”

The Court of Appeals also failed to give petitioner the most favorable view of the evidence when it stated that an employee of the contractor climbed the pole on which the dual switches or fuses were located. The pole which he climbed was the one on which were situated clamps controlling the twelve thousand volt lines. These clamps had been loosened by means of a “hot stick”. While Mr. Sherrill’s testimony is not entirely clear, plaintiff himself testified:

“Q. Now, that pole that you used the hot stick on is the same pole that the fuses are on, isn’t it?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. It’s a different pole?
“A. Yes, sir.”

The Court of Appeals apparently concluded that a member of the repair crew climbed the pole on which the knife-blade fuses were located, in close proximity to them, so that he would necessarily have observed them. This is not the fact situation, as we understand the record, and we believe that a jury issue was presented as to whether or not the repair crew, including the petitioner, did or did not act reasonably in failing to detect the knife-blade switches, under the icy and adverse weather conditions then obtaining. It was also for the jury to determine whether petitioner and the other members of his crew acted rea[95]

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544 S.W.2d 92, 1976 Tenn. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-electric-power-board-tenn-1976.