Thеse are two actions of tort, brought by the administrator of the estate of Henry R. Edgarton, to recover for the death and conscious suffering of his intestate alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendants.
Facts which could have been found are these: At about 5 a.m. on August 22, 1942, the plaintiff’s intestate was riding in a truck owned by the defendant H. P. Welch Co. and operated by one of its employees, Pollard, on Ashburn-ham Street, Fitchburg. The intestate, a boy of eighteen years, had got on the truck in Vermont. (It is agreed that Pollard had no authority to invite the intestate to ride with him.) The truck (which was described as a tractor and trailer type) was being operated on a regular freight run between Burlington, Vermont, and Somerville and was carrying eight or ten tons of merchandise. While going around a curve on Ashburnham Street, the truck, instead of following the curve, went straight on over a curbing and across a lawn until it came to a wooded bank “where there was a steep drop.” Continuing down the embankment, the truck sideswiped a tree, and its rear end hit and broke off a pole on which electric wires were strung.
When the truck came to rest it was in a precarious position at the top of another steep bank. Up to this time neither the intestate nor Pollard had been hurt. Although the emergency brake was then set and the truck was in gear, its position was such that Pollard was afraid to take
The pole with which the truck collided was owned by the defendant New England Power Company (hereinafter called the power company) which operated a substation about a mile and a half away. At this station electricity was received at sixty-six thousand volts and was “stepped down” by transformers to thirteen thousand eight hundred volts. It was then transmitted to customers on “feeder” lines at the reduced voltage. “Feeder” No. 2 supplied nine mills of the Crocker Burbank Paper Company in Fitchburg. The pole with which the truck collided was carrying a “tap line” consisting of three wires from “feeder” No. 2 and supplied power to mill No. 5 of the Crocker Burbank company. These wires were not effectively insulated. When an overload on one of the lines occurred by .reason of a short circuit it automatically opened a switch or circuit breaker at the substation which shut off the power. At 5:08 on the morning of the accident one of the switches opened and shut
There was expert evidence from which it could have been found that the electric shock which killed the intestate occurred in the following manner. One of the broken wires of the “3-phase” circuit came in contact with the ground and another broken wire came in contact with the metal body of the truck.
The plaintiff offered to prove, in substance, the following
1. All of this offered testimony was excluded subject to the plaintiff’s exception.
2. Considering the evidence which was introduced together with that which was erroneously excluded, we think that the plaintiff was entitled to go to the jury in the case against the power cоmpany. The power company, of course, was not an insurer. It was required to exercise care that was reasonable in the circumstances. But inasmuch as electricity is a highly dangerous force, those employing it are properly held to a correspondingly high degree of care in its use. O’Donnell v. Boston Elevated Railway,
3. The power company argues that even if there was evidence which would warrant a finding that it was negligent, yet the plaintiff is barred from recovery because the intestate’s status on the land where the accident happened was that of a trespasser or licensee. If the intestate was merely a trespasser or licensee with respect to the powеr company the plaintiff could not recover, for there is no evidence of wanton or reckless conduct on its part. It appears that the land on which the accident occurred was owned by O. S. Cook & Sons Company, and that the power company had acquired, for a term of fifteen years, “The right and easement to construct, reconstruct, repair, maintain, operate and patrol,
But this contention cannot prevail. Considering the manner in which the truck came in сontact with the property of the power company, the intestate was not a trespasser. The trend of modern authority is than an unintended intrusion upon the land in possession of another does not constitute a trespass. Feiges v. Racine Dry Goods Co.
4. But the verdict was properly directed for the defendant power company on the count for conscious suffering. The only evidence of conscious suffering was that as the intestate put his foot on the running board of the .truck he “started to say ‘Oh.’” Whether, in view of the fact that his death occurred immediately thereafter, this attempted utterance by the intestatе was a result of a conscious effort or was purely a reflex action, is purely speculative. We think that this aspect of the case is governed by Royal Indemnity Co. v. Pittsfield Electric Co.
5. It remains to consider whether the case against the H. P. Welch Co., the owner of the truck, ought to have been submitted to the jury. It is conceded that its employee Pollard was without authority, express or implied, to invite the intestate to ride on the truck on the day of the accident. In these circumstances there would be no liability to the plaintiff on the part of the H. P. Welch Co. arising out of Pollard’s conduct up to the time the truck came to a stop. This aspect of the case is governed by O’Leary v. Fash,
It is not necessary to determine whether, after the truck
It follows that in the case against the power company the plaintiff’s exceptions must be sustained and in the case against the H. P. Welch Cd. the plaintiff’s exceptions must be overruled.
So ordered.
Notes
The declaration in the action against the New England Power Company contained counts alleging wilful, reckless, and wanton conduct, but these were waived.
The cause of the intestate’s death was electrocution.
The fact that the automatic switch oрened when the pole was knocked down but did not reopen after the line was reenergized was explained as follows: When the wires fell they came in contact with something that was of solid metal which would allow a sufficiently large current to flow through the lines to open the circuit breaker. That condition then changed so that one wire settled on the ground in such a way that it was imperfectly grоunded, and the other wire was against the truck, but these wires were insulated from each other by means of the truck tires, consequently “no current could flow of sufficient magnitude to trip the circuit breaker again.”
Photographs taken shortly after the accident reveal two broken wires hanging down from the broken pole. The broken wires were long enough to reach the ground.
It could have been found thаt this interruption would account for the fact that the intestate was able to get out of the truck, go to the rear, open the doors, and obtain his luggage without receiving a shock.
When this evidence was excluded the following colloquy took place: “The Judge. Mr. Banks [plaintiff's counsel], so far as in your offer of proof you included certain items that were the subject of expert interprеtation, as to what might have happened at the scene of the accident, I do not exclude such things, but I am excluding such aspects of your offer of proof as bear upon the- device that might have been resorted to by the defendant power company to detect or otherwise ascertain more accurately what the situation was along its power lines. Counsel for the plaintiff. I so understood it, your Honor.”
