Boomer v. Southern California Edison Co.

267 P. 178, 91 Cal. App. 375, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 981
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 27, 1928
DocketDocket No. 5330.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 267 P. 178 (Boomer v. Southern California Edison Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boomer v. Southern California Edison Co., 267 P. 178, 91 Cal. App. 375, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 981 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

HAHN, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment entered upon a jury’s verdict for the plaintiffs for damages suffered by reason of the destruction by fire of certain household furnishings belonging to the plaintiffs and located in a dwelling occupied by them as their home.

The complaint alleges that the defendant without right or permission so to do attached its “high-powered electric service wires” to plaintiffs’ house for the purpose of serving electric energy to a house located upon an adjacent lot; that the said wires were so defectively, negligently and carelessly attached to plaintiffs’ house, and were so defectively and negligently maintained thereon that the said house and the furnishings therein contained were destroyed by fire on March 9, 1924; that the fire “was caused by the said energized electric wires,” and that at the time of the fire plaintiffs were occupying said house and had certain furnishings and personal property therein, all of which were destroyed by said fire through the careless and negligent acts of said defendant.

The answer admits that defendant attached its wires to plaintiffs’ house, but denies that said wires were high-powered or other than the usual service wires used in connection with furnishing electric energy to dwelling-houses for lighting purposes. The answer further denied all of the other material allegations of the complaint and in addition sets up an affirmative defense in the nature of a plea in abatement, alleging that the plaintiffs herein with one L. A. Boomer did on the fourth day of September, 1924, file an action in the superior court in and for the county of Orange, for the purpose of collecting a claim of $3,500 as damages alleged to have been suffered by the said named plaintiffs by reason of destruction of their house by fire; that the house therein described and referred to is the same house described as destroyed by fire in the instant case, and its destruction was caused by the same fire which resulted through the same circumstances as alleged in the instant case causing the *377 destruction of plaintiffs’ furniture. The defendant further alleges that a judgment was rendered in the aforesaid referred to action in favor of the plaintiffs herein and their son, L. A. Boomer, for the sum of $2,500, and that an appeal has been perfected from the said judgment to the supreme court of the state of California.

Upon the submission of the case to the jury a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum of $1,000. From the judgment entered upon this verdict the defendant appeals.

From the evidence in the record the following undisputed facts may be gleaned:

In the early morning of March 9, 1924, as day was breaking, the dwelling-house occupied by the plaintiffs, and which was jointly owned by plaintiffs and their son, L. A. Boomer, was destroyed by fire, together with a large portion of the furnishings located therein owned by the plaintiffs. The house had recently been constructed, and had been occupied but a few months prior to the conflagration. On January 1, 1924, J. A. Boomer, one of the plaintiffs, signed a written request to the defendant company, which is a public utility distributing electric energy in that locality to connect their house with electric wires for lighting purposes. About the same time, a similar request was made of the defendant by a neighbor whose house was about 20 feet distant from plaintiffs’ house. Defendant had a power line some 250 feet from plaintiffs’ house, and on January 25th, for the purpose of supplying plaintiffs and the neighboring house with electric current for lighting purposes, ran two service wires from its power line and connected the service lines by porcelain spools to the ends of the rafters on the northeast corner of plaintiffs’ house. From this point the service wires ran up toward the gable and under the overhanging eaves to a point where they were fastened again to porcelain spools which in turn were attached to a false beam nailed on to the rafters. From this point the wires were strung to the neighbor’s house.

At the time of the fire plaintiffs’ house had not yet been connected with the service wires, the reason appearing for the delay being that the plaintiffs had failed to furnish or construct a meter-box in which the defendant was to install its meter. The neighboring house, however, was connected *378 with the service wires and used electric energy carried over them for four or six weeks prior to the fire.

Attached to one of the poles on the defendant’s power line, and at a point not far from where the service lines attached to the feed line, was a 5-kilowatt transformer such as is usually used for reducing the electric current from 2,200 volts, as carried on their feed lines, to 110 volts carried on the service lines. This transformer was equipped with 5-M spring fuses which served the purpose of breaking electric connections in the event that an excessive voltage passed from the feed lines into the service lines. The service lines were insulated and of the size and character usually used for such purposes. It further appears that the service wires, as they approached plaintiffs’ house and were carried along from the ends of the rafters to a point under the eaves from which they left respondents’ house for the neighboring house, at no point were nearer to each other than 12 inches. There is some testimony in the record that one of the insulated service wires touched the false rafter near the porcelain spool to which this wire was attached.

There is no direct evidence as to how the fire was started. Early in the morning, just about daybreak, plaintiffs were aroused by someone calling “fire.” On reaching the outside of the house they found that the roof was on fire, the fire burning under the eaves and running up toward the ridge of the gable. Apparently the fire was first observed by one Emma J. Williams, who stated that she lived “straight east two long blocks from plaintiffs’ house, and that there was nothing to obstruct her view of plaintiffs’ house.” She further testified that on the morning in. question she got out of bed and pulled up the shade of her bedroom window to see if it was daylight, and then for the first time observed a light located apparently on plaintiffs’ house, which “looked unusually large to me for an ordinary electric light.” She stated that she then remarked to her husband that the light did not look like an arc light, and that she believed it was a fire, and that upon further observation she thought that the light she saw was a blaze coming out of the roof of plaintiffs’ house. She stated that she did not remember seeing any smoke at first, but that later she saw some smoke; that the light as she first saw it was quite pale and not red, and fixed the location of the light as on the northeast corner *379 of plaintiffs’ house “right up on top of the eaves.” The only other testimony in the record describing the fire is that of the plaintiffs and their son, who first observed the fire when it was well under way, burning up the end gable and through the roof. The witnesses all. place the fire at its outset as burning in the vicinity of the northeast corner of the roof where the two service wires were attached.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 P. 178, 91 Cal. App. 375, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boomer-v-southern-california-edison-co-calctapp-1928.