Baine v. Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co.

1992 OK CIV APP 140, 850 P.2d 346, 1992 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 166
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 3, 1992
Docket77948, Appeal 78345
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1992 OK CIV APP 140 (Baine v. Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baine v. Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co., 1992 OK CIV APP 140, 850 P.2d 346, 1992 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 166 (Okla. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

HANSEN, Vice-Chief Judge:

In this tort action arising from an airplane accident, Appellant seeks review of the trial court’s orders granting Appellees’ motion for new trial and denying Appellant’s request to specify the grounds on which the new trial was granted. We reverse and remand.

Appellees George Baine and Dane Scott Knight were the passenger and pilot, respectively, of a small airplane participating in a search for a missing elderly man. The accident occurred when the airplane struck a wire of an electric transmission power line. Baine and Knight were injured and seek recovery for those injuries. Their wives, the other Appellees, brought derivative claims.

Appellant filed two motions for summary judgment. In the first, it argued lack of duty to mark the line because it neither constructed nor owned the line. In the second, Appellant argued alternatively a lack of duty because the accident was not foreseeable, or that the sole proximate cause of the accident was Appellee Dane Knight’s negligence. The trial court denied both motions.

The action was tried to a jury, which found Appellee Dane Knight 100% negligent, and Appellant 0% negligent. Appel-lees moved for a new trial, alleging 21 *348 errors. The trial court granted Appellees’ motion without specifying the alleged errors upon which it relied.

Appellant filed its initial petition in error from the trial court’s order granting a new trial. Appellant filed a second petition in error from the trial court’s denial of its request for the court to state its reasons for granting a new trial. The Supreme Court consolidated the two appeals for our consideration.

In its brief in chief, Appellant sets forth five propositions alleging trial court error. Because we find the issue of lack of duty determinative, we need not consider the remaining propositions.

“The threshold question in any suit based on negligence is whether defendant had a duty to the particular plaintiff alleged to have been harmed.” Rose v. Sapulpa Rural Water Co., 631 P.2d 752, 756 (Okla.1981).

Our Supreme Court, in Wofford v. Eastern State Hospital, 795 P.2d 516, 519 (Okla.1990), found that:

Whether a defendant stands in such relationship to a plaintiff that the law will impose upon the defendant an obligation of reasonable conduct for the benefit of the plaintiff is a question for the court.

The determination of Appellant’s duty toward Appellees was therefore a question of law for the trial court. In making that determination, the most important consideration is foreseeability. Wofford v. Eastern State Hospital, at 519. As a general rule:

... a defendant owes a duty of care to all persons who are foreseeably endangered by his conduct with respect to all risks which make the conduct unreasonably dangerous.

Wofford, at 519.

The negligence alleged by Appellees here is Appellant’s failure to mark the static line to make it more visible to aircraft. Whether there is a duty to so mark an elevated transmission line has not been decided in Oklahoma.

The parties cite a number of cases from other jurisdictions, each party finding decisions which appear to support their contentions. The common thread of those decisions is that the ultimate result turns on the question of foreseeability, and what is, in effect, a risk analysis.

We find the holding and reasoning in Florida Power and Light Co. v. Lively, 465 So.2d 1270 (Fla.App. 3 Dist.1985) to be most instructive. There, as here, a small plane collided with a nonenergized static line. The line was approximately 102 feet off the ground. The plane was flying at a low altitude because of an emergency caused by loss of power. The Florida Court of Appeals adopted the following rule, and under the facts there found no duty:

... no duty or breach of duty exists as a matter of law where the following elements exist: the height of power lines and their location are in compliance with applicable ordinances and FAA regulations; no notice of prior accidents of a similar kind involving the power lines exists; and the power lines, as constructed, do not create an unreasonable risk of harm.

Florida Power and Light v. Lively, at 1274.

We have not been directed to any evidence which establishes that either the height of the line in question, or its location, are violative of applicable ordinances, state rules or laws, or Federal Aviation Administration regulations. Similarly, the record does not reflect any evidence Appellant had been put on notice of previous aviation accidents at the same location.

We are then left with the question as to whether the lines created an unreasonable risk of harm. In considering that question, we first note we are unpersuaded by Appel-lees’ assertion the law requires the highest standard of care be imposed on Appellant because an electrical transmission line is a “dangerous instrumentality”.

While the dangerous instrumentality rule may be appropriately imposed in an action for injuries by electrical shock, we do not find it relevant to the circumstances of this action. See, Florida Power and Light Co. v. Lively, at 1276, footnote 5.

*349 The standard we find applicable here is that of ordinary care, which is:

... that degree of care which ordinarily prudent persons engaged in the same kind of business usually exercise under similar circumstances, and means that degree of care which is reasonably commensurate with the danger of instrumentality used.

Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Price, 298 P.2d 772 (Okla.1956)

In establishing the limits of our ordinary care examination as set forth in Phillips Petroleum, we again find guidance in Florida Power and Light Co. v. Lively, at 1273:

We do not believe it could be argued logically that every transmission line, regardless of height and location must be marked, under penalty of liability for all ensuing air accidents.

Assuming, without deciding, that Appellant would be the party responsible for marking the line, we find it had no duty to do so because it could not be reasonably contemplated that a plane would have been flying at the altitude of the crash in that location.

It is uncontroverted the line is not in the vicinity or approach pattern of any airport, nor is it located over open water. It is in these locations the courts have consistently imposed a higher standard of care in marking lines. While some aircraft had been seen in the area in the past, there is no indication their appearance was so frequent, or of such nature, to put Appellant on notice of special safety requirements.

The line spans a four lane, heavily traveled highway. The location is in a rural area, but with approximately 40 homes within a half mile circular area. The poles holding the line are set on hills on both sides of the highway.

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Bluebook (online)
1992 OK CIV APP 140, 850 P.2d 346, 1992 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baine-v-oklahoma-gas-electric-co-oklacivapp-1992.