City of Weatherford Water, Light & Ice Co. v. Veit

CONNER, C. J.

The appellee Alvin Veit instituted this suit for damages arising from injuries to his person against the city of Weatherford Water, Light & Ice Company, hereinafter referred to as the Light Company, alleging, briefly, that on the Sth day of February, 1915, he was an employs of the Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Company, hereinafter referred to as the Telephone Company, as one of its linemen; that the Telephone Company had occasion to make some repairs on its line in the city of Weatherford, and directed him to go to that point from his residence in Ft. Worth, Tex., to assist in making the repairs; that in order to make the required repairs it became necessary for him to ascend one of the poles of the Telephone Company supporting a wire cable attached to a cross-arm near -the top of the pole, which was some 25 to 30 feet above the pavement; that after having ascended to the top of the pole, and in descending therefrom, he came in contact with a high-tension, uninsulated wire of the Light Company, and was thereby so shocked and paralyzed as to be unable to release himself; and that upon having been released from contact with the high-voltage wire by another he fell to the pavement below and was seriously injured. It was alleged that the Light Company had erected and maintained its pole supporting the high-tension wire in close proximity to the telephone pole; that the light pole was some 8 to 12 feet lower than the telephone pole; that the high-tension wire of the Light Company had been fixed and maintained upon the inner instead of the outer portions of the crossbar, which was carrying the' Light Company’s wires; that in so fixing and maintaining said high-voltage' wire in such proximity to the telephone pole the Light Company, in order to prevent its said high-voltage wire from coming in contact with the telephone pole, had attached to the telephone pole a bracket to which the light wire was attached, and which had the result of placing the wire but a few inches from the telephone pole and a few inches below an iron step fixed to the telephone pole for the use of the employés of the Telephone Company in ascending and descending the pole carrying the telephone wires. It was charged that the Light Company was negligent in all of these particulars.

The appellant company answered by a general denial, plea of contributory negligence on appellee’s part, and specially alleged, among other things, that its said light pole had been erected on the streets of Weather-ford under the direction of that city many years prior to the time that the telephone pole in question was erected; that its said light wire had been attached to the bracket fixed to the telephone pole for the protection of the telephone pole and had been long known to the Telephone' Company; that there had been an understanding and agreement between the Light and Telephone Companies whereby the Light Company would shut off the current of electricity upon its wires when employés of the Telephone Company were required to make repairs upon its wires; that upon the occasion in question, if it was dangerous under the circumstances for the plaintiff to have ascended the telephone pole mentioned in his pleadings, the Telephone Company well knew of the fact, and, so knowing, made no request for the electric light current to be shut off; and that it, hence, was negligence on the part of the Telephone Company to so erect its pole and direct repairs, without such request, upon the pole in such close proximity to the light wire. For these reasons it was alleged that the injuries to the plaintiff were proximately caused by the negligence of the Telephone Company, and the Telephone Company was accordingly made a party with defendant, with prayer on the part of the Light Company that whatever judgment, if any, against it might be rendered in favor of plaintiff might also be rendered in its favor over against the Telephone Company.

The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues, and upon the return of the verdict, which was generally in favor of plaintiff upon all issues, the court entered a judgment for the plaintiff against the appellant Light Company for $1,850, with interest thereon from the 9th day of May, 1916, at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum with all costs of suit. The judgment was also *989against the appellant company and in favor of the Telephone Company on the former company’s cross-bill, and the Light Company has appealed.

There are, as it seems to ns, but two. serious questions presented. The first is whether the verdict of the jury in favor of the plaintiff on the issue of his contributory negligence is supported by the evidence; and the second is whether, under the' undisputed evidence, the appellant company was entitled to a judgment over against the Telephone Company on its cross-plea, and these questions will be disposed of in their order.

We will not set out the evidence at length. It has been carefully considered, however, and, in substance, is sufficient to support the following conclusions: That the plaintiff had been in the employ of the Telephone Company for several years and was what was termed as an experienced lineman; that he lived in the city of Ft. Worth, and went to Weatherford upon the occasion in question in response to the orders of his foreman, a Mr. Holmes; that the cables and wires of the Telephone Company had become deranged by reason of a recent fire, and that as part of the duties of his employment the plaintiff was required to ascend the pole in question in order to test and repair the telephone wires; that the plaintiff was unacquainted in the city of Weatherford, and unacquainted with the precise condition and arrangement of the electric light wires, although he knew such wires were in existence and being maintained upon the Light Company’s poles. He could also see the location of the several poles, mentioned, and could see and have observed the arrangement of the electric light wires and could, had he looked with that end in view, have seen and observed the proximity of the light wire to the telephone pole and to the iron bracket thereon situated. He was without knowledge or information, however, that the light Company carried its high-tension wires on the inner portions of its crossbar; the general custom being to carry wires of high voltage on the outer ends of the crossbars so as to remove such high-voltage wires from easy contact on the part of employes in ascending or descending its poles. The plaintiff at the time had not been warned or notified that the electric light high-tension wire was carried on tlie inner portion of its crossbar, or that the high-voltage wire had been attached by a bracket to the telephone pole, or that the high-voltage wire was without insulation at that point, and he in fact testified that he did not know these things at the time that he ascended the pole, although, as stated, had he examined the wire for the purpose of ascertaining, he could, and doubtless would, have noticed the attached wire, and could, and doubtless would, have noticed the want of insulation. In this respect, however, he stated that in going up the telephone pole, which he did safely, he did not notice .that the electric light wire was uninsulated and in fact did not know'that it was a'high-voltage wire. He testified that after he ascended the telephone pole, which was some 8 to 12 feet higher than the light pole, his foreman, Holmes, called to him in answer to which he undertook to descend the telephone pole; that he had attached to each leg the usual iron spur worn by employés to aid them in ascending and descending poles; that on the telephone pole affixed to the north and south sides thereof were iron steps from some 8 or 10 feet from the bottom of the pole to near the top; that the steps were about,3 feet apart; that when on the occasion under consideration he undertook to descend he grasped with his left hand what is termed the “stell messenger” that supported the cable of the telephone wires and started to swing himself underneath the cable in order to go down the center of the pole; that in doing so he swung his body to the south with his right foot at an angle toward the second iron step from the top, whereupon, to use his expression, “the electricity grabbed” him and he was unable to turn loose. The evidence further shows that he remained transfixed to the high-voltage wire of appellant company until Mr. Holmes, in answer to the screams of the ap-pellee, ran and ascended the pole and removed the appellee’s foot from the contact wire, whereupon appellee fell to the pavement below, as heretofore stated. There is evidence tending to show that the high-voltage wire of appellant company had been, by the Light Company, attached to the telephone pole on a bracket, as alleged, within 2 inches of the iron step which the appellee was evidently intending to reach when his foot came in contact with the high-voltage wire. The evidence does not make certain whether plaintiff’s foot or the iron spur with which it was equipped came in contact with the high-voltage wire before the plaintiff’s foot reached the step, or whether his foot reached the step and therefrom slipped upon the wire.

The jury found that the appellant company was guilty of negligence in the manner in which it carried its high-voltage wires upon its crossbeams, and was also guilty of negligence in attaching its high-voltage wire to the telephone pole, and in maintaining it without insulation, and that such negligences proximately caused plaintiff’s injuries, and in these respects it cannot be doubted that the evidence supports the verdict, and while appellant has cited a number of very strong cases tending to show that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in ascending and descending the pole, yet we do not feel able to say that the evidence in this case, as a matter of law, requires that conclusion. Each case is dependent upon its particular-circumstances and must be judged thereby.

And in determining the question presented in the present case it will be well not to confuse the doctrine of assumed risk with *990that of contributory negligence. The defense of assumed, risk rests upon an implied contract on the part of the servant entering the service of his master to assume the risk of all dangers ordinarily incident to the service in which he is engaged, or from injury due to dangerous conditions surrounding the service of which the servant had notice, or in the exercise of ordinary care should have known. This defense may exist even in the absence of contributory negligence. As said in the ease of H. E. & W. T. Ry. Co. v. McHale, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 360, 105 S. W. 1149:

“One may be so careful as to be entirely free from negligence in the manner in which he performs his work, and yet because of the danger necessarily incident to the work, or due to conditions within his knowledge or of which he must have known, had he exercised ordinary caro, he cannot recover for injuries while in the performance of such work on the ground that he has assumed the risk of such injuries.”

But in the case before us the question, as against the appellant Light Company, is not one of assumed risk, for the appellee was not one of its employes, and hence no contract, express or implied, between these parties existed. As between them, the question is one of contributory negligence purely, and, as is generally true, one for the determination of the jury.

It is true under the evidence that appellee might, had he made an inspection to see, have ascertained the fact that the Light Company’s wires were attached to the telephone pole, and might have discovered the fact that the wire was uninsulated, but he was not required to make such inspection.' He had a right to assume that his master, the Telephone Company, had provided ,him with a safe place to work. He had no means of knowledge, and there is no evidence tending to show that he had knowledge, that the electric light wire, even had he observed its position on the telephone pole and had known of its uninsulated condition, was one of high voltage.

It cannot be said that in the exercise of due care for his own safety he might not assume that the high-voltage wires of the Light Company were affixed to its crossbars in the usual and customary manner, and which, if such had been the case, would have indicated that the wire which resulted in the injury was one of harmless voltage. Appellant insists that appellee was warned, but we find in the evidence no warning other than a general one given to be careful of live wires. There is no evidence that appelle^ was specifically warned that upon the pole in question the Light Company had attached a high-voltage wire that was uninsulated and there is nothing in the evidence which! as we feel, requires us to say that the appel-^ lee was not truthful in declaring that he did not observe this wire nor its condition in ascending the pole. He declares that he was facing west ascending a pole some 12 inches in diameter at the bottom, tapering to 7 inches at the top; that in ascending the pole after having reached the iron steps he was required to swing his body first to the north and then to the south; that upon his person he had his iron spurs, his safety belt, buzzer, and operating tools, and was so intent upon his work that he did not observe the wire. On the whole we conclude that the evidence supports the jury’s finding in appellee's favor on the issue of his contributory negligence, and that all assignments of error raising this question should be overruled. As fortifying the conclusions so announced, it may not be amiss to cite the following authorities: Planters’ Oil Co. v. Keebler, 170 S. W. 120; Hill v. Union Electric Light & Power Co., 260 Mo. 43, 169 S. W. 345; Ry. Co. v. Arey (Sup.) 179 S. W. 860; Frantz v. Citizens’ Electric Co., 231 Pa. 689, 80 Atl. 1106.

On the other question mentioned our judgment is in favor of the appellant company. It is true that under the evidence and the findings both the Light Company and the Telephone Company were guilty of negligence in the particulars charged, which proximately .contributed to the injuries suffered by the appellee Veit, and it is also a general rule, as insisted by the appellee Telephone Company, that joint wrongdoers or tort-feasors are not entitled to contribution; that in such cases generally the courts leave the wrongdoers responsible for an injury just where they find them. But to this general rule there are exceptions. Our Supreme Court, in the case of Railway Co. v. Railway Co., 83 Tex. 510, 18 S. W. 956, thus notices the distinction. ' It was there said:

“The rule is far from being universally true that there can be no contribution between wrongdoers. It prevails in that class of cases denominated as intentional torts or wrongs. But there are cases where, although the wrongdoers in contemplation of law may all be liable to the party seeking redress, yet as between themselves some of them may be blameless. It is on this principle that their equity to require the others to respond is complete.”

The same court in the case of City of San Antonio v. Smith, 94 Tex. 271, 59 S. W. 1109, again refers to the subject in the following language:

“It is well settled that under some states of fact two parties may be liable to another for a tort, the one by construction of law, on account of some omission of a duty of protection or care owed, and the other because he is the active per'petrator of the wrong, and that in such case the right of indemnity may exist' in the one whose wrong was only a secondary one.”

In the case of Austin Electric Ry. v. Faust, 133 S. W. 449, the Court of Appeals for the Third District declared that:

“Where one person has by his negligence brought about a condition, and another person is guilty of negligence in not recognizing and acting upon such condition, and a third person, without negligence, is injured by reason of the inegligence of the two persons, if the negligence X>f one was merely passive, or such as only to produce the occasion, and the other negligent person was the-active perpetrator of the wrong, the former may recover over against the latter, since, as between them, the negligence of the ac*991tive perpetrator of the wrong would be the proximate cause of the injury to the person whose negligence did no more than produce the condition.”

In harmony'with the principles so stated, our Supreme Court held in the ease of City of San Antonio v. Talerico, 98 Tex. 151, 81 S. W. 518, that, while the city was liable to one injured in stepping in a hole which the city had negligently allowed to exist in a sidewalk on one of its streets, nevertheless the city might recover over against the person whose wrongful act caused the dangerous condition in the sidewalk. See, also, on the same subf ject the case of Washington Gaslight Co. v. District of Columbia, 161 U. S. 316, 16 Sup. Ct. 564, 40 L. Ed. 712, and the decisions cit&l in the note to that case.

Applying the principles so stated, we are of the opinion that the undisputed evidence shows that the Telephone Company, and not the Light Company, was the active wrongdoer in the present case. The evidence shows without dispute that the Telephone Company erected its pole in close proximity to that of the Light Company. Both companies did business in the same town for many years. The agents and employés of the Telephone Company, as well also as those of the Light Company, must have known of the arrangement and location of the Light Company’s high-tension wires on its crossbars, and of the location and arrangement of the high-tension wire with which the appellee Veit came in contact, and with the fact of its uninsulated condition, for neither company could escape the duty of proper inspection, and any sort of inspection would have de-. veloped the location of the wires and of the uninsulated condition of the high-voltage wire; for this wire had been, according to the undisputed testimony, attached to the telephone pole some four or five years. It was the duty of the Telephone Company undoubtedly to furnish its said employé with a safe place to work, and it was active negligence on its part to send such employé into the dangerous position up among its wires without specific warning of the location and uninsulated condition of the high-voltage wire with which Veit came in contact, and without notification to the employés of the Light Company that it, the Telephone Company, was about to repair its lines and to request that- the Light Company, as the evidence shows it would have done, cut off its current. On the part of the Light Company the negligence seems merely passive. In maintaining its uninsulated high-voltage wire as it did do upon the telephone pole it merely created the dangerous condition. The wire might have so remained and been maintained without injury to any one indefinitely in the absence of necessity on the part of the Telephone Company to repair its wires, and for one of its employés to ascend that particular pole, and so th^ dangerous condition might have remained harmless by due warning on the part of the Telephone Company to its employés when directed to ascend the pole, or the dangerous condition might have been entirely removed by a request to cut off its power. Nor, as we think, can it be said from the evidence that the act of the Light Company in fastening its wire to the telephone pole in the .manner it did increased the danger beyond that caused by the act.of the Telephone Company in erecting and maintaining its pole in such close proximity to the pole and wires of the Light Company. On the contrary, the evidence tends to show that in' the absence of the bracket, the light wire would have approached very closely to, if not entirely up against, the telephone pole, and that the bracket was placed against the telephone pole and the wire fastened to the bracket for the purpose of extending the light wire away from the telephone pole. For aught that appears, had the Light Company taken no care in this respect whatever, the wire in question would have been just as near and possibly nearer the iron step on the telephone pole than it was left when fastened to the bracket. So that the negligence of the Light Company in fact consisted merely in its failure to inspect the wire and thus ascertain its uninsulated condition, and in its failure to reinsulate or otherwise protect the wire against possible contact with employés of the Telephone Company in ascending the pole, should occasion require.' We therefore are of opinion, as before stated, that as between the Light and Telephone Companies the latter was the active wrongdoer, and that under the undisputed facts the Light Company was'entitled to judgment as it prayed for over against the Telephone Company. In the note to the United States Supreme Court 'dcN dsion hereinbefore referred to cases are. cited to the effect that a judgment in favor of an injured party against the passive wrongdoer is, when due notice has been given to the active wrongdoer, conclusive as to the amount of damages and other matters necessarily involved in the litigation.

We also have a statute (Revised Statutes 1911, art. 1626) Which provides that:

“When the judgment or decree of the court below shall be reversed, the court [of Civil Appeals] shall proceed to render such judgment or decree as the court below should have rendered, except when it is necessary that some matter of fact be ascertained or the damage to be assessed or the matter to be decreed, is uncertain,” etc.

We therefore conclude that, inasmuch as the Telephone Company had due notice of this suit and of appellant’s cross-action against it, and had opportunity to and actually did litigate the questions, and inasmuch as we are of the opinion that as between these parties the judgment should be reversed, and that under the undisputed facts the appellant Light Company was entitled to the judgment over against the Telephone Company, as prayed for, that it should be now and here so *992•adjudged; the judgment below in all other respects being undisturbed.

The remaining assignments of error are not deemed to be material, and are overruled without discussion.

Affirmed in part, and reversed and rendered in part.