145 Va. 409 | Va. | 1926
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
John JI. Mitchell was electrocuted through a guy wire, which had become charged with 2,300 volts of electricity, transmitted by the Appalachian Power Company over a line crossing a field of the Christiansbui’g Industrial Institute, used to supply electric power to a pump house owned by the institute. His administratrix sued the company, and there has been a judgment, based upon the verdict of a jury, in her favor.
The writ of error is being vigorously prosecuted here. The claim for the defense, which is repeatedly made and argued at length, is in substance, though not in form or legal effect, equivalent to a demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence. Much of the evidence offered for the plaintiff was excepted to, nearly if not all of the instructions which were given by the court are criticised and were excepted to, exceptions are taken because the court refused to give numerous instructions offered for the defendant company, and there was a motion to set aside the verdict of the jury and give judgment for the defendant, notwithstanding the verdict.
It is claimed for the company that there should have been a judgment by the trial court in its favor, because—
“1. The line in question was wholly on the premises of the said industrial institute, of which the decedent was the general manager, and was built to furnish power to a pump house belonging to and operated by said institute.
“2. According to the evidence of one of the witnesses called for the plaintiff, viz., the general manager of the power company, the said line was not built under the direction of the power company and was neither the property of, nor under the control of, the defendant.
“3. That the power to said pump house, conducted over said line, was furnished under a special contract in writing between the said industrial institute and the defendant power company, which defined the obligations of the parties thereto in respect to the furnishing of said power.
“4. That the said guy wire, as it was originally installed, and as it was for some time prior to the accident, and until it was moved by the employees of the institute, was perfectly safe and not liable to cause any injury to anyone.
“5. That the injury complained of, and which caused the death of the plaintiff’s decedent, could not possibly have happened if said guy wire had not been, by the employees of the institute, unnecessarily and wholly unreasonably moved across the road over the fence and into the field, in which the plaintiff’s decedent was at the time of his death, and then presumably,
Because of this view of the evidence, a motion was made to strike out the evidence of the plaintiff so far as it tended to connect the defendant with the death of the plaintiff’s decedent on the following grounds:
“1. That such evidence was not responsive to the issue presented by the pleadings, and was not sufficient to establish the negligence imputed in the notice to the defendant.
“2. That the evidence showed that the proximate cause of the death of the decedent was the acts of persons other than the agents and representatives of the defendant, and was in the last analysis due to the decedent’s own act and want of ordinary care.
“3. That the contracts introduced in evidence, together with the parol evidence in connection therewith, showed that the defendant company was not the owner of said power line, not responsible for its construction or maintenance, or the presence of the guy wire at the point where the decedent met his death.”
If the record supported the implications so expressed or implied, the elaborate argument based thereon would be unanswerable, but the facts which are either proved or conceded confute and destroy these arguments.
The court having overruled the motion, exception thereto was duly taken.
It is observed that a fundamental proposition which is so insisted upon is the claim that the decedent was the general manager of the institute (while the proof is that he was the manager of the farm only), and that his death was caused either by the negligence of the institute, or of the plaintiff’s decedent.
(a) It is shown that while the decedent was the .general manager of the farm, he had no duties or responsibilities whatever in connection with this power line, or with the electricity transmitted to the pump house, which belonged to and was operated by the institute.
(b) As to the construction and ownership of this portion of the line, it is shown that it is from one-half to three-quarters of a mile long; that it was built by the co-operation of the institute and the power company. The institute desired and permitted the construction, and furnished the poles, while the power company furnished the wires; assisted in the construction; transmits its power over the line, and does the ordinary repairs.
(c) The special contract in writing which is referred to, and which it is insisted the court should have construed as operating to relieve the defendant of all responsibility, is the standard contract required of all consumers. It provides for the furnishing by the company to the institute of “60 cycles, 1 phase, 110* volt electric current upon the premises No................... St., Cambria, city,............................State, occupied as a pump station.” Printed on this contract are certain rules and regulations, which are referred to and made a part of that agreement. The portions of the rules particularly relied on are these:
“(1) The company will furnish the meter and necessary service connection to the customer’s premises, which shall remain the property of the Company*415 and may be removed by it at any time on the termination of this agreement or the discontinuance of the service.
“All wiring and other electrical equipment or apparatus within the premises of the consumer, excepting the meter, shall be furnished and put in place by the consumer, and the company shall not be required to supply any current hereunder until such wiring, equipment and'apparatus has been made to conform to the rules and requirements of the latest Code of the National Board of Fire Underwriters and those of the company.
“(2) The consumer shall at all times during the term of this agreement maintain and repair the wiring, equipment and apparatus to be furnished by the consumer as aforesaid, in such condition as may be required by the company, and by any statute, law or city ordinance, and by the rules and regulations of the National Board of Fire Underwriters.
“(3) The consumer shall not permit any one other than authorized ¡employees of the company to interfere with the meters or other appliances of the company, and shall provide for the safekeeping of such meters and other appliances. The consumer shall insure the company against any damage or injury to the property of the company located in the premises of the consumer, which is not incurred by any act or omission on the part of the company, its agents or employees.”
The farm of the institute contained about 185 acres, and upon it there was a charitable school for negroes, maintained by the Freedmen’s Association of America, with headquarters at Philadelphia.
The insistent claim is that under rules 1 and 2 of this contract, all wiring and other electrical equip
As has been shown, the same word, “premises,” appears upon the face of the contract and there clearly the “premises” referred to are not the entire farm, but the premises occupied as a pump station, which is the point of delivery. The duty and the risk of the transmission is upon the company until it reaches the consumer for use at the delivery point. Why there should be attributed to the word “premises” any different meaning, when used in the printed rules and regulations constituting a part of the same contract, we are unable to perceive. Indeed, we are perfectly clear in our view that under such a contract as this, the company contracts to transmit the electric current to the building which is to be supplied with light and power. It is within these premises (here the premises occupied as a pump station) that the consumer supplies the equipment, and it is this equipment for which the consumer is responsible. The clause does not apply to “construction of lines,” to use the language of the company’s witness, Wellford. This construction of
“Our lineman stationed at Christiansburg, Mr. Bolling, simply connected up this motor at your request and as a favor to you and for which no charge was made, the company not assuming any responsibility for his work. This was explained to you at the time and you were informed that the company did no inside wiring and preferred that such work be done by outside contractors, and simply acceded to your request as a special accommodation.”
The rights of this plaintiff do not, however, depend upon the ownership, construction, and maintenance of the high power line through the farm to the pump house. Questions as to this ownership may arise between the institute and the company, but neither can escape responsibility to the plaintiff for their negligence, joint or several, by reason of such questions.
The parol evidence shows, without substantial contradiction, that this guy wire was attached to a pole on a curve about one foot above one of the uninsulated bare high power wires; that it, the guy wire, was also entirely uninsulated; that for years the other end of it had been attached to a post on the opposite side of one of the farm roads; that this post had rotted; that about two months before the injury this guy wire had been attached to another post nearer to the power line; that later it had become detached and had gotten in the way of the laborers in connection with their
It seems to us, upon the question of the negligence of the company, the actual ownership of the line is a matter of little consequence, under these circumstances, because to transmit such a deadly current of electricity over such carelessly constructed and unprotected wires is primary negligence on the part of the company, and this whether it owned or controlled the wires or not. It may be true that the institute is also chargeable with negligence, but that cannot relieve the company unless it was free from negligence, because joint tort feasors are equally liable.
No one knows the precise time or exactly how the guy wire was brought in contact with the transmission line, but that from the time of its construction there was constant danger of such contact with the lowest transmission wire is perfectly appare'nt. There were no cross-arms, but all the wires were closely attached to the pole which carried the high power wires; so that there was always the danger of contact between the high power wire and the guy wire. When the guy wire was removed from the rotting post to which it had been attached across this farm road, this danger was greatly increased and became still mere imminent as it lay across the farm road nearly under the post, and after the horse’s foot became entangled in it.
With the utmost respect for the views of counsel, we cannot think it necessary to pursue this matter much further. Even if the company had succeeded in showing that the negligence of the institute was more culpable than its own negligence, this, as has been indicated, could not change the result. The transmission of twenty-three hundred volts of electricity, under these circumstances, without standard equipment, or ordinary care, to protect from such an injury as this, was its proximate cause and constitutes actionable negligence imputable to the transmitting company. As to this line on which the injury occurred, the company was at least a licensee, and as responsible for negligent construction of which it had notice and failure of maintenance which it had assumed as if it had been the absolute owner of the right of way and line.
The only question in the case which, under our view of this evidence, could fairly arise, is whether or not the decedent was himself guilty of contributory negligence. When, however, we note that the wire had been handled several times by several persons without injury, that the employees of the company had said that there was no danger in handling such wires, and that it was left loosely hanging for so long without injury, it. is apparent that this question was properly submitted to the jury.
There is complaint that an expert witness was
The instructions, in our view of the evidence, were much more favorable to the defendant than they should have been, because they adopted the view that this defendant might escape liability if it showed that the institute owned and negligently constructed the line, or by any of its servants, or negligently caused the injury. '
As we have so plainly indicated, we think the verdict is fully sustained by the evidence, and that the jury properly decided the only question about which there could have been any fair difference of opinion, namely, that decedent Mitchell had not been guilty of contributory negligence.
Affirmed.
Rehearing
Upon a Petition for Rehearing.
Richmond.
November 26, 1926.
delivered the opinion of the court.
The petition for rehearing quotes two clauses in the original opinion, and bases, one of its reasons for asking for a rehearing thereon.
The criticised expression was not intended to create such a conflict. So to construe it is to misconstrue it. The context shows that the opinion neither overrules nor conflicts with the recent case of Gallaher v. Waynesboro Mutual Telephone Co., 143 Va. 383, 130 S. E. 233. The power company, in this case, has been held responsible because of its relation to the power line involved. It aided in its construction, furnished the wire, alone used it, and assumed the responsibility for its maintenance. These and the circumstances indicated in the opinion differentiate this case from the Gallaher Case, supra, and the line of cases so insistently relied upon.
Rehearing refused.