Texas Traction Co. v. George
Texas Traction Co. v. George
Opinion of the Court
This suit was instituted by Mrs. Mattie Pearl George in behalf of herself and her minor children, J. R. George and Leslie N. George, against the Texas Traction Company, a corporation, and the Stark Grain Company, a partnership composed of J. T. Stark and L. B. Stark, to recover damages on account of the death of Larkin N. George, husband of Mrs. George and father of said minor children, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the appellants. It is charged, in substance, that the Texas Traction Company owns and operates an extensive interurban railway system, extending from the city of Dallas, Tex., to Sherman, Tex., passing through the town of Plano; that the cars of said system are run and propelled by electricity generated, owned, and controlled by said Texas Traction Company; that said Texas Traction Company owns and controls several substations along its route, one of which is at Plano, Tex. It is further alleged that the Stark Grain Company undertook, along with its other-business, to install and operate a system of electric lighting for the town and citizens of Plano; that in pursuance of said purpose and undertaking a contract was entered into by and between the said Texas Traction Company and the said Stark Grain Company, by which the former was to furnish and supply the latter, for a consideration, with electricity necessary for said lighting business; that, acting under said agreement, it became necessary to install certain transformers, a switchboard, and other electrical apparatus for the purpose of conveying the current of electricity from the power house of the Texas Traction Company for the use of the Stark Grain Company; that subsequently, on or about March 5, 1909, the defendant Stark Grain Company employed one T. E. Philpot, doing business under the name of Philpot Hardware Company, then engaged in the general plumbing business in Plano, *439 to make certain plumbing connections on tbe substation of tbe Texas Traction Company; that tbis employment was bad and the work clone with tbe knowledge, acquiescence, and for the benefit in part of said company; that the representatives of tbe Texas Traction Company and tbe Stark Grain Company bad previously conferred with each other as to tbe time and tbe manner of installing tbe transformers as set out under tbe terms of their agreement, and, in pursuance of tbe arrangement between them, tbe Stark Grain Company undertook to supervise and direct in detail the work being done by Larkin N. George. It is further alleged that George was a plumber and lacking in experience with electrical machinery; that tbe necessary plumbing connections were near certain wires heavily charged with electricity in tbe substation; that while in tbe performance of bis duties, according to tbe directions and for tbe benefit of defendants, and while standing on a stepladder, without any knowledge of bis own danger and without any fault on bis part, “he came in close proximity to and contact with one of said deadly wires, producing such sudden and fatal shock that be met instantaneous death.” Tbe grounds of negligence alleged, and upon which tbe case was submitted, were: (1) That tbe defendants, knowing tbe dangers incident to tbe work of which tbe deceased was ignorant, failed to cut off, or provide any means for cutting off, the current of electricity during tbe performance of bis work; (2) that tbe defendants employed him and permitted him to do bis work without properly insulating the wires which killed him; (3) that they permitted him to do said work without any proper or adequate warning as to tbe dangers thereof; but that the Stark Grain Company, acting for itself and for tbe benefit of tbe Texas Traction Company, gave an inadequate, improper, and misleading warning to tbe deceased.
Tbe defendants filed separate answers; tbe Texas Traction Company pleading the general issue and denying responsibility for tbe death of George on the grounds: (1) That there was no negligence so far as tbe Texas Traction Company was concerned; its plant, wires, and machinery all being constructed in tbe usual and proper way within its own substation, and that no duty devolved upon it to reconstruct its plant. (2) That deceased Jmew tbe deadly character of tbe wires, their location, and that tbe machinery was in motion, and assumed tbe risk of doing tbe work in which he was engaged when killed. (3) That he was warned of the danger by j. T. Stark, his employer, and that, even if J. T. Stark misdirected him or deceived him in respect to the deadly character of this wire, the Texas Traction Company was not responsible. (4) Contributory negligence. And (5) accident. The defendant Stark Grain Company pleaded a general denial, assumed risk, and contributory negligence on the part of the deceased, Larkin George; that said George, at the time of the accident causing his death, was in the employ of the Phil-pot Hardware Company, and not in the employment of defendants; that the said Phil-pot Hardware Company was an independent contractor engaged to do the work George was doing when killed; and that whatever work George did was done at the request of said Philpot Hardware Company in whose employ he then was. These defendants also adopted the allegations of the Texas Traction Company’s answer not inconsistent with the defenses specially pleaded by them. A jury trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiffs against all of the defendants .for the sum of $5,000, and, their respective motions for a new trial having been overruled, they appealed.
The first assignment of error urged by the appellant Texas Traction Company is that the “court erred in refusing the peremptory instruction requested by Texas Traction Company, because it was shown by the undisputed testimony, as well as by written contract, that deceased, George was not an em-ployé of the Texas Traction Company, but that the Stark Grain Company was an independent contractor so far as this defendant was concerned, and that the deceased, George, at the time of his death was performing work either for the Stark Grain Company or the hardware company, and in any event not for Texas Traction Company.”
At the time the accident occurred resulting in Larkin George’s death, the Texas Traction Company owned and operated an interurban electric railway running from Dallas to Sherman, having a power plant at McKinney, halfway, and what is called a substation at Plano. The high voltage wires necessary to run the cars enter this substation, which contain machinery whereby the current is transformed so as to perform the service according to the recognized rules of electrical engineering. The Texas Traction Company, having a surplus amount of current, entered into a contract with the Stark Grain Company, whereby said grain company was given the right to connect in the substation, in order to use current for lighting purposes in the town of Plano. The substation referred to consists of a brick building about 40 feet square with high ceilings, cement floor, etc. The ticket office adjoins, separated by a middle sliding door, and on the outside next to the track is a double door leading into the machinery room. On the inside of the machinery room is certain electrical apparatus usual and necessary in the operation of an interurban electrical railway, and what is knowin as high-tension wires carrying about 18,000 or more volts of electricity coming out from the main power plant at McKinney go into this substation at a point high up next to the ceiling and then come *440 down into the electrical apparatus, etc. In the southeast corner of this large room, or near the corner, is located what is known as a “vault,” being in fact a brick structure some 3 feet wide, 10 or 15 feet long, and about 6 feet high, inside of which are switches, etc., necessary to operate the plant. On the top of this vault is constructed a framework of iron piping running high up into the building from the top of the vault, and across which is strung, upon insulators, the high-tension wires, some 12, 15, or 18 feet above the floor. This pipe framework is constructed by upright piping running from each corner of the vault, so as to make a frame. Just west of and near to this vault is located some three or four transformers, which consist of large iron incasements some three or four feet in diameter, circular form, standing up about the height of the vault, and out of which wires run. There was an open space in the north end of this large room, about one-half of the room. Stark Grain Company was in the lighting business in the towtn of Plano, and, in order to procure current from the Texas Traction Company out of the substation so as to furnish electric lights in the town, it was necessary for it to place what is called a transformer in the machinery room to take the current, and, before the wires were connected, it was necessary that a pipe framework be erected north of the vault, which framework would be tied on or clamped to the pipe framing of the Texas Traction Company at the top of the vault on the north end, which is done by clamps, thereby holding it steady and firm. The contract between the Texas Traction Company and the Stark Grain Company was in the nature of a written proposal, accepted in writing by the Stark Grain Company, under date of December 7, 1908, and by its terms the Texas Traction Company agreed to provide suitable space in its substation at Plano for the Stark Grain Company to install the transformer and the other necessary electrical apparatus or machinery to procure the current of electricity desired for lighting purposes, and the Stark Grain Company agreed to pay the cost of such installation and to remove, at the termination of the contract, at its expense, all apparatus installed by it, and restore the traction company’s property to its original condition. The contract specified the amount to be paid for the current to be thus furnished and stipulated that it should remain in force for the period of four years from January 1, 1909, unless otherwise terminated, as therein provided, and it was in force at the time George was killed.
The oral testimony bearing upon the relationship between the Texas Traction Company and the Stark Grain Company, and the particular proposition presented in the assignment under consideration, is too voluminous to be given in detail. A fair interpretation of it is that in the substation at Plano the Texas Traction Company has a surplus of electric power, and the Stark Grain Company, a lighting concern in Plano, desired to purchase and utilize current to be paid for by meter measurement when operation began. In order to furnish such current for lighting purposes, it was necessary for the Stark Grain Company to place in the machinery room an apparatus or transformer to reduce the current by what is called “induction.” It was simply agreed that Texas Traction Company would furnish space in the room so that the grain company could place at its own expense its own apparatus or transformer; the exact location not being determined until the morning of or the day before the accident, but was then agreed upon. It was necessary that Stark Grain Company, in connection with its apparatus or transformer, put in a pipe framework in order to carry the wires when placed; the only requirements of the Texas Traction Company in this respect being that the pipe should, for the sake of looks, conform in size and color to the other framework already in the building. Stark Grain Company was to furnish its own apparatus, transformer, piping, etc., and was only to place the transformer at the place directed by the traction company, and on its own account to erect the pipe framework, which necessarily must be clamped to an upright framing already existing in the building over the north end of the vault, a brick structure some six feet high containing oil switches, etc. J. T. Stark engaged T. E. Philpot, doing business under the name of Philpot Hardware Company, a tinner and plumber, and explained just what he wanted, and they together planned as to the character of clamps necessary and proper to make the connections. George, an employs of Philpot, went to the building and helped to plan the framework, and undertook to do the job; he being a tinner and plumber by profession. This pipe framework was put together by him out of the building, and then with the assistance of J. T. Stark and Wyatt brought into the building and placed by them, when George proceeded to put on the clamps, thereby fastening the end of the pipe to the framework already in the building. To do this he used a stepladder. These connections were distant some 10 or 18 inches from the high-tension wires in the building. The work was not dangerous in itself, and the wires were harmless as straws — to use the words of a witness — unless touched, and it was not necessary to touch them in doing the work. Texas Traction Company had no control whatever over Stark Grain Company or the Philpot Hardware Company as to the means employed for the work, or the control or direction of any employé of either, but was only interested in the result of the work. Stark selected his own plumber, contracted for the price, and paid the same. It *441 is not shown that any employé or officer of the traction company, unless J. T. Stark may be considered its representative or employ é, was in the building at the time, or knew that George was in the room or had anything to do with the work of installing the transformer or iron pipe framework.
In this state of the evidence it is quite clear, we think, that no ground of negligence upon which appellees predicate their right to recover was unknown to the deceased, George, at the time he undertook to do the work he was engaged in doing when killed, and that therefore he assumed the risk incident to such work. The evidence tending to show that an electrical current sometimes “jumps” and may kill without touching the wire was not of sufficient probative force to authorize and support a finding that the deceased was killed in that way, and therefore the failure to warn the deceased of that fact, if it is a fact, becomes immaterial. Besides, the evidence indicates very clearly that the deceased came in actual contact with the wire, and it was alleged in effect in appellees’ petition. The deceased having assumed the risk incident to the work he was doing when killed, it must be held, no matter how deplorable the accident and how much it is to be regretted, that no cause of action exists in behalf of his widow and children for a recovery of damages on account of his death and their loss. This view renders a discussion of the other assignments of error unnecessary. The appel *444 lants, under the practically undisputed evidence, were entitled to a peremptory charge directing a verdict in their favor, and, this being true, it becomes our duty to render such judgment in this court as should have been rendered in the court below. It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the district court be reversed and that judgment be here rendered in favor of all of the appellants. Reversed and rendered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- TEXAS TRACTION CO. Et Al. v. GEORGE Et Al.
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- 9 cases
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- Published