60 Wash. 356 | Wash. | 1910
Lead Opinion
About ten o’clock p. m. on March 12, 1908, W. L. Abrams, living in the city of Seattle, went into the kitchen of his residence, attempted to turn on an electric light, and received a shock which instantly killed him. The city of Seattle then owned and operated an electric power plant, from which, under contract, it was furnishing current to Abrams’ house for illuminating purposes. This action was commenced against the city by Anna E. Abrams, and Eleta L. Abrams by Anna E. Abrams, her guardian ad litem, widow and daughter of W. L. Abrams, to recover damages resulting from his death. From a judgment in their favor, the defendant has appealed.
A short time before his death, Mr. Abrams, from his window, had noticed some electrical phenomena on the wires near his home, afterwards shown to have been caused by the “primary” crossing and coming in contact with the “secondary.” This contact was not continuous but intermittent, a variable but heavy wind occasionally throwing the wires together. Evidence was introduced to show that the “secondary” wire and the insulator to .which it was attached had become separated from the cross-arm of the light pole; that the secondary had fallen across the primary where insulation had become defective from rain and other causes; that the 2,200 voltage from the primary was thus transmitted to the secondary; that this excess voltage did not reach the earth because the ground device was out of repair; that this condition of the wires and ground might have been caused by the blasting of a large stump near by; that the ground did not carry the excess current from the secondary, and that it was therefore carried into the dwelling house where it electrocuted Mr. Abrams. The appellant contended that it had exercised due diligence in the inspection of its wires and other appliances; that it had used such modern and proper devices as were ordinarily used and required; that the defective condition of the wires and ground was caused without its participation, knowledge, or consent, by third parties, and that the death of Mr. Abrams resulted from an unavoidable accident, and not from its negligence.
Appellant first contends that the trial judge erred in giving the following instruction:
In substance, appellant’s contention is that the trial judge erred in holding the burden of proof, which was shifted to it to show that it was not negligent, should be sustained by it by “a fair preponderance of the testimony.” We think no prejudicial error was committed in this regard. The doctrine of res ipsa loquitur should be applied to its fullest extent in this case. The appellant, for its own profit, was dealing in one of the most dangerous agencies known to modern science. Electricity is a silent power which ordinarily can be neither seen nor heard. Yet it can be so controlled, by those upon whom the duty of its control is imposed, that it may safely be conducted into a private residence, where it becomes harmless and useful. The city had contracted to furnish the Abrams house with light. It was under an implied contract to do this in the safest manner possible.' Its duty was to protect Abrams and his family, by exercising the highest degree of care, skill, and diligence in its selection, construction, and maintenance of devices and appliances. Mr. Abrams was entitled to assume, when attempting to utilize the electric current in the customary manner, that he would not be subjected to personal injury or sudden death. When
“ ‘While it is true, as a general proposition, that the burden of showing negligence on the part of the one occasioning an injury rests in the first instance upon the plaintiff, yet, . . . when he has shown a situation which could not have been produced except by the operation of abnormal causes, the onus rests upon the defendant to prove that the injury was caused without his fault.’ When the physical facts surrounding an accident in themselves create a reasonable probability that the accident resulted from negligence, the physical facts themselves are evidential, and furnish what the law terms evidence
Practically speaking, it is immaterial whether to the duty of explaining the cause of the accident which the law imposes upon appellant, we apply the term “burden of proof” or the term “preponderance of the evidence.” As suggested by counsel for respondents, there can be no magic in any particular form of words. To grant a new trial on the theory that the instruction given was so erroneous as to be prejudicial, would, we think, be a miscarriage of justice.
Appellant further contends that the trial court erred in instructing the jury as follows:
“Every reasonable effort must be made to adopt and use all proper means readily obtainable and known to science for the prevention of accidents;”
and in refusing the following requested instruction:
“I charge you that the law does not require that the city should install and adopt every new device and electrical appliance and safeguard that may be put upon the market for sale; the city has done its whole duty in regard thereto when it installs and uses all those appliances and devices and safeguards which are in common and general use and generally approved by electrical experts and men who know about such matters and when it has exercised that degree of care and caution heretofore defined to you in these instructions in the adoption and use of such appliances and devices.”
The instruction to which the appellant excepts is an excerpt from the following instruction given by the court, in which we italicize the words to which appellant objects:
“The general charge of negligence or carelessness made by the plaintiffs against the defendant includes negligence in the appliances and devices adopted and installed as a part of its system, and negligence in the maintenance and operation
It seems to us that this instruction is such a fair statement of the law as not to mislead the jury to appellant’s disadvantage. It would be difficult to frame a more satisfactory or complete statement of appellant’s duty in the matter of adopting modern and safe appliances. The rights of both parties were well guarded, and the question of fact whether appellant did discharge its duty was thereby properly submitted to the jury for determination.
Appellant vigorously insists that the trial court erred in denying its challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, and its later motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Its position seems to be that the sole and direct cause of the accident was the wrongful and illegal act of a third party in firing a blast, which caused the crossing of the wires and so disturbed the ground device as to impair its usefulness; that the blasting occurred in the morning about seven o’clock, on
The respondents contended, and offered evidence to show, that certain appliances used by appellant were not suitable or appropriate for the purposes they were intended to serve. But without regard to such contentions, we have concluded, from an examination of all the evidence, too voluminous to be here stated, that the questions whether the blast mentioned caused the accident, whether the city had timely notice of such blasting, whether it was diligent in inspecting and protecting its wires and equipment, and whether it used such modern appliances as were required by that high degree of care imposed upon it, were all for the jury, and the evidence on these issues was clearly sufficient to support the verdict. Mr. Abrams was killed in his own residence, without warning, without his fault, by an excessive current of electricity, transmitted over appellant’s wires. Appellant’s wires were crossed. There was evidence that its ground device did not properly perform its functions, and that its servants in charge of the central station were not informed of the condition of its wires for several hours after Mr. Abram’s death. It was its duty to have and keep all of its appliances in safe condition and proper repair. It did not do so, and it was certainly a question for the jury to determine whether it was negligent or. whether it had exercised that high degree of care and diligence which the law requires from a person dealing with such a deadly agency.
In Royal Elec. Co. v. Heve, 11 Quebec L. R. (K. B. 1902) page 436, plaintiffs recovered damages for the death of a
“But in my opinion, it is a matter of indifference, legally speaking, where this current originated. The appellants should be held responsible for it under any circumstances. They deal in a commodity of a recognized dangerous character, the control of which is a matter of technical knowledge and experience, and entirely uncomprehended by the general public. When a company like the appellants, organized under the name of an electric company, hold themselves out to the public as dealers in and suppliers of that commodity for gain, and make contracts with private individuals for furnishing light or power over a system constructed and controlled by themselves, they are bound to deliver it in a form and under conditions of safety for the person and property for whose use the company charge and receive compensation, and they are also bound, in the discharge of their part of the contract, to a supervision and diligence proportionate to the peculiar character and danger of the commodity in which they deal. . . The implied contract between the appellants and deceased was that they should supply his premises with a safe electrical current for lighting purposes by the lamps which they furnished. They failed in this respect, and in the use of their lamps he received a current of electricity by which he was instantaneously killed. The presumption is that it came over the same system and from the same source as that by which his ordinary supply was delivered to him by appellants. The burden of proof is upon them to show the contrary. -This they have failed to do, and the judgment holding them responsible for the accident should be confirmed.”
It is evident from the verdict in this case that the jury concluded the appellant had not sustained the burden of proof resting upon it to show that the accident was not caused by its negligence. In Chaperon v. Portland Elec. Co., 41 Ore. 39, 67 Pac. 928, plaintiff’s horse was killed during the night season at about three o’clock a. m., by coming in contact with
“When plaintiff made a prima facie case, this imposed upon the defendant the burden of showing, as we have seen, that the fracture of the wire was a condition not due to its fault, or that it used due care in the construction and maintenance of its system, and that the accident was one that could not have been provided against by reasonable foresight and precaution. This burden should not be confused with the burden of making the better case as between the plaintiff and defendant. The plaintiff must have made the better case in the end by the preponderance of evidence. When the defendant produced its evidence, the case rested; and it became a matter for the jury to determine whether it had succeeded, or whether, notwithstanding its attempt at exoneration, plaintiff’s prima facie case was even yet the stronger and more satisfactory. The questions to be passed upon were of fact, and it was not within the province of the court, under the evidence adduced, to say to the jury, by directing a verdict, that its exoneration has been substantiated, and therefore that plaintiff’s prima facie case had been overcome. So there was no error in finally submitting the case to the jury.”
Other assignments of error, based upon instructions given and refused, and upon the admission of evidence relative to previous blasting near the wires, we find to be without merit.
The appellant has been awarded a fair trial. The jury found against it, and their verdict must stand. The judgment is affirmed.
Dunbar, Mount, and Parker, JJ., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) — I concur in the foregoing opinion, in the main, but cannot approve of an instruction that the burden of proof is on the defendant to show a want of negligence, by a fair preponderance of the testimony, in cases