139 Minn. 122 | Minn. | 1918
Action to recover for death by wrongful act. There was a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendant appeals from the order denying its alternative motion for judgment or a new trial.
There was evidence that the break was caused by a bolt of lightning. If so the defendant, if there was no accompanying or subsequent negligence on its part, was not liable. Assuming that the lightning caused the break, the plaintiff claims that the defendant was negligent in not sooner locating the break and taking such action as would have prevented the killing of the child.
In the power plant was an instrument called a current breaker. At 4:30 in the morning it “threw out.” This indicated a serious disturbance on the line. To those experienced in electrical plants it meant that there were likely two wires down. One down wire might but usually would not bring this result. The night operator telephoned the superintendent. He at once took his automobile, got two linemen, and started in search of the trouble. He went along the line several miles until he came to the branch going north to St. Joe. He followed the branch until he found a wire down and a resultant ground a mile south of the village. He repaired it and returned to St. Cloud about 7:30 and went about other work, first sending two men with an automobile to the west to patrol
The principle of law applicable is not in doubt. The company was not an insurer. The measure of its duty was the exercise of ordinary care. It was using a dangerous agency. If not controlled and guarded it might do great injury. The amount of care required to constitute ordinary care under such circumstances is care commensurate with reasonably apprehended dangers and risks. Musolf v. Duluth Edison Electric Co. 108 Minn. 369, 122 N. W. 499, 24 L. R. A. (N. S.) 451; Gilbert v. Duluth General Electric Co. 93 Minn. 99, 100 N. W. 653, 106 Am. St. 430. The break was apparent on casual observation. It was not hidden. Fence posts were burning along the fence towards the plaintiff’s house. The line was along a much traveled highway through a thickly settled farming community. It could be quickly reached. The jury was justified in concluding that with all the information the defendant had at 4:30 in the morning and from then on it was its duty to exercise very 'active and persistent diligence until it located the two grounds or found that there was but one; that it did- not maintain a sufficiently active search after discovering the one at St. Joe; and that it failed in the exercise of the ordinary care which the situation demanded. The evidence sustains the finding of negligence.
The plaintiff’s house was about a half mile, measured at right angles, from the place where the wire broke. The child was killed about 500 feet from the house in -a- lane leading from the public road passing the house. About six o’clock in the morning the plaintiff, when getting his cows, saw that a wire was down and that some of the fence posts were burning. He told his wife. They purposely kept information from the children. It is likely that they feared they would be attracted to the place -and that there was danger. About 7 o’clock the plaintiff went to Richmond. The children were playing about the house. Their mother was engaged about her household work. She did not notice their leaving. Apparently they went out on the public highway in anticipation of their father’s return, and coming to the lane were attracted by the burning
Order afiirmed.