Bujol v. Gulf States Utilities Co.

147 So. 545, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1640
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 17, 1933
DocketNo. 1116.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 147 So. 545 (Bujol v. Gulf States Utilities Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bujol v. Gulf States Utilities Co., 147 So. 545, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1640 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

BE BBANC, Judge.

Binden Bujol, eighteen years of age, son of Mr. and Mrs. Adam Bujol, was killed by electrocution by a high-tension wire of the defendant company, Gulf States Utilities Company, in the town of Jennings, Ba., at about 6:30 o’clock in the evening of June 5, 1931.

He was an employee of the Couch & Porter Construction Company, which was engaged in building a paved highway in Jefferson Davis parish; his particular duty on the day on which he was killed being to connect a water pipe line along the proposed highway to furnish water with which to mix the concrete. His parents were awarded compensation for his death under the Employers’ Bia-bility Statute (Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended), and the employer has intervened in this proceeding claiming the right to recover payments it lias made, and is obligated to make, against the defendant.

Plaintiffs allege in their petition that their son was killed through the gross carelessness and negligence of the defendant company, specifying numerous acts thereof, the most important of which only it is necessary here to note as follows:- (1) That it failed to properly protect and guard its high-powered wires hy insulation; (2) that it gave no signs of warning by posting or otherwise of the potential danger lying in its lines; (3) that it unnecessarily overcharged its wires and permitted them to sag, and especially at the place where this accident occurred they sagged to such a point as to have made it extremely dangerous to workmen, travelers, and pedestrians who had to be in that vicinity.

Alleging that their son was the only member of their family to whom they -could look for support in their declining years, and that because they will be deprived thereof as well as of his love, affection, and companionship, plaintiffs each ask to be awarded damages against the defendant in the sum of $25,000.

The defendant, for answer to plaintiffs’ petition, denies all the acts of carelessness and negligence charged against it, and avers that its power line was constructed, maintained, and operated in the usual prescribed and proper maimer, and that the accident and subsequent death of their son was caused through his own carelessness and negligence “in -attempting to perform the work far which he was employed in a manner known to him to be unsafe and dangerous and, contrary to the positive instructions of his employer.” As an alternative, defendant specially pleads contributory negligence. The petition of the construction company was also answered by the defendant and the intervention-thus put at issue.

From a judgment in the district court rejecting the demands of the plaintiffs and of the intervener, they have all taken this appeal.

The place where this accident occurred is within the corporate limits of -the town of Jennings, but, from the fact as it appears in the record that defendant’s power line ran through an abandoned rice field inclosed within a barbed wire fence, it can readily he assumed that it was an uninhabited part of the city.

Plaintiffs’ son had only been working with the construction company a few days before he was killed. He was in a crew of three men engaged in connecting pipes with which to lay down a water line as heretofore stated. The pipes they were using were old and rusty, and, before being connected, had to be cleared of the accumulated rust on the inside. To do this, it was necessary to hammer them on the outside so as to loosen the rust and then to stand them on end, so that they could be cleared of the particles. Of the crew of three, young Bujol was the only educated man, and, whilst it cannot be said from the! testimony as we read it that he was the foreman, still he seemed to have more to do and say on the job than the two others who were illiterate.

Just before the accident they had been hammering a length of pipe measuring 22 feet 2½ inches long; and were standing it on end to clear it of the rust. At this moment they werei inside the barbed wire fence which inclosed the rice field, standing either on top or on the side of a small dam or levee formerly used to hold the water in the rice field. This levee was almost directly under the power lines of the defendant company, and, as they raised the pipe, the top end of it either came in direct contact with or so near a high voltage line as to attract the current from it, and the result was that the two other men who were holding the standing pipe with Bujol were severely shocked, and he was killed almost instantly.

Taking up the charges of negligence in the order in which we have stated them, we might say right here that we do not believe that there is any testimony to support either of the first two.

It is not disputed that the wires of the defendant company at this point in its line were not insulated, but the evidence shows that a line of this kind is no-t generally insulated, *547 and that the National Bureau of Standards whose rulings govern in their construction does not require that they he. The duty of insulation seems to be limited, according to the authorities as we read them, “to those points or places where there is reason to apprehend that persons may come in contact with the wires, and the law does not compel electric companies to insulate their wires everywhere, but only at places where people may go for work, business or pleasure, that is, where they may reasonably be expected to go.” Ruling Case Law, vol. 9, p. 1213, par. 31. From 20 Corpus Juris, p. 355, par. 42, we quote the following:

“The exercise of a sufficient degree of care requires a careful and proper insulation of all wires and appliances in places where there is likelihood or reasonable probability of human contact therewith. * * *
“The duty to insulate does not extend to the entire system or to parts of the line where no one could reasonably be expected to come in contact with it.”

Here it is shown that the wire which carried the charge of electricity that killed young Bujol was 20 feet 2½ inches above the top of the rice levee, which itself is shown to have been as much as 2 feet high. Moreover, as also shown, it ran through an old rice field, where we hardly believe it could lie contended that there was reasonable likelihood or probability of people coming in contact with the wires. The nature of the work Bujol was engaged in and the circumstances under which he came in contact with the wire in this case furnishes, in our opinion, an exceptional case, which certainly was not in the contemplation of the rule announced in the authorities cited.

It is not disputed either that defendant posted no signs or warnings of danger in the! vicinity where this accident occurred, but we think that what has been said with reference to the lack of insulation of the wires applies with equal, if not greater, force, in regard to the placing of warning signs. We have not been referred to any law or custom which requires the posting of such signs in places like this, where it is not reasonable to expect people to come in contact with the heavily loaded wires.

This brings us to a consideration of the third and most serious charge of negligence against this defendant. This charge involves the sagging of the line and its being overcharged with electricity.

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Bluebook (online)
147 So. 545, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bujol-v-gulf-states-utilities-co-lactapp-1933.