66 P. 576 | Or. | 1901
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action by R. B. Boyd against the Portland General Electric Company to recover damages alleged to have been suffered by him on account of an injury to his minor son from coming in contact with a live electric light wire. The defendant is a corporation engaged in supplying the City of Portland and its inhabitants with electric light, for which purpose it has put up poles along the streets, having cross-arms near the top, upon which its wires are stretched. The day before the accident, and while a storm was prevailing, two of the
The answer denies the negligence charged, and,’ for an affirmative defense, after alleging the contributory negligence of the plaintiff’s son, avers that the wire which parted was one of the best known standard manufacture, and was placed upon the poles in a proper way; that a heavy storm prevailed during the afternoon of the sixth of December, the wind at one time reaching a velocity of sixty miles an hour, which the defendant believes forced the wire across a larger one on the cross-arm to the north of it, so that the friction of the wires caused the insulation to wear away, permitting them to come in contact; that between 6 and 7 o’clock in the evening the smaller one burned through and parted, and fell in loops across the other, as stated in the complaint; that, although defendant had the best known appliances in use at the time for detecting or discovering the grounding of its wires, it had no knowledge of such parting until notified of the accident to plaintiff’s son, when, upon examination, it ascertained that neither end of the broken wire had come in contact with the ground, so as to form a short circuit, and therefore the fact of the wire having parted could not be indicated by its appliances. The reply put in issue the new matter alleged in the answer; and, the trial resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff, the defendant appeals.
Having thus disposed of the questions presented on this appeal, and finding no error in the record, the judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.