Burton Telephone Co. v. Gordon

15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 641, 4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 1
CourtGeauga Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 641 (Burton Telephone Co. v. Gordon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Geauga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burton Telephone Co. v. Gordon, 15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 641, 4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 1 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

COOK, J.

The action below was to recover damages by reason of personal injuries to defendant in error in coming in contact with a wire of the telephone company lying in the public highway which was heavily charged with electricity.

There was a trial and a verdict for plaintiff below against the company; a motion for a new trial on the part of the company, which was overruled, and judgment upon the verdict.

There is little dispute about the facts. The telephone company, having obtained legal authority so to do some years before the injury, constructed a one-wire line from the village of Middlefield to the village of Burton, in Geauga county, along the public highway. Some time after the line was constructed the Cleveland & Eastern Railway Company constructed an interurban electric railway between the same villages over a right of way procured by it not upon the public highway. At a point about a half mile from Burton the electric railway crossed the public highway, intersecting the telephone line about at right angles. Where the intersection took place the electric railway company put in a pole on the public highway oh which it strung four one-half inch copper wires; two feed wires on a crossbar on top of the pole and two trolley wires upon an arm extending out from the pole. The pole was about twenty-one feet high and the arm upon which the trolley wires were strung was about fourteen feet from the ground. By an arrangement between the telephone company and the railway company the [643]*643telephone wire was also attached to this same pole about four feet above the two trolley wires by a glass insulator connected with a metal bracket and ran across the two trolley wires about four feet above the same to a pole of the telephone company, also on the public highway about fifteen feet distant. The telephone wire was not insulated, incased, or otherwise guarded. During a severe storm on the evening of June 1, 1901, this pole of the railway company was struck by lightning; it was shivered and the metal bracket with the glass insulator which supported the telephone wire was knocked from the pole and the telephone wire dropped down, and across the trolley wires of the railway company and became charged with a large voltage of electricity from the trolley wires.

The evidence does not show that the metal bracket was not properly fastened to the pole or that there was any defect in the wire as to' strength or size or that it was impaired or deteriorated to any extent. During the same storm a pole of the telephone company at the outskirts of Burton close to the residence of defendant in error, standing in the highway about one-half mile from the pole referred to, was also struck by lightning and the same wire by the intense heat was severed, and that end of the wire next to the first pole referred to fell upon the ground close to the pole; and defendant in error but a very short time after the storm, possibly twenty to thirty minutes, in going to the house of a neighbor upon the public highway at a place where she had a right to be, inadvertently became entangled in the wire and was severely burned and injured by the large amount of electricity in the wire communicated from the trolley wires of the railway company. The poles of the telephone and railway companies had previously been frequently struck by lightning, and the wires detached, prior to the injury complained of. The wires were placed by the railway company upon its poles as wires are usually placed when electric railway lines and telephone lines intersect each other.

At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence a motion was made to take the case from the jury and render a judgment for the telephone company. This motion was overruled as was also, as we' have said, the motion for a new trial; and plaintiff in error claims that the court erred in both these regards.

It must be conceded that the judgment of the court below can only be sustained upon the theory that it was the ’legal duty of the telephone company under the circumstances to have adopted some means that-would reasonably prevent its wire from becoming dangerously charged with electricity from the trolley wires of the railway company and that, its failure to do so was negligence.

[644]*644The introduction of electricity as means of commerce is of recent date. That it majr be lawfully used is recognized by both the legislative and judicial department of the state. While it is highly useful, at the same time its use is attended by the greatest danger to person and property. Its potentialities for good are great, but its destructive', power is equally as great. It is of the most subtle nature, so subtle that its presence can only be determined by contact which, when it is not under control, usually results in death or great bodily injury.

The use of the public highway is primarily for the public convenience for the purposes of travel. The plaintiff below was upon the side of the highway and she had a right to rely that she was walking in a safe place. She 'had a perfect right to go on her way justified by the • law that her pathway was secure. If these companies had jointly placed something in the public highway with which she might inadvertently come in contact (which was filled with peril), the duty devolved upon them and each of them to show that the peril arose through no fault of. theirs.

In Western Union Tel. Co. v. State, 82 Md. 293 [33 Atl. Rep. 763, 765; 31 L. R. A. 572; 51 Am. St. Rep. 464], Justice Page of the court of appeals of Maryland in a case where Nelson was killed by reason of coming in contact with a broken telegraph wire heavilj' charged with electricity from the wires of an electrie railway company, well says:

"“The railway company pursued its business by means of cars propelled by electricity partially supplied through feed wires over and along the edge of the pavement. The telegraph .company had its poles also along the curb line, and its wires, extending along the street, were over and along the feed wire, which, though insulated, carried a deadly current. The privilege so granted thus to incumber the public highway with appliances so likely to become dangerous to the public safety, unless properly employed and controlled, imposed upon them, and each of them, the duty of so managing their affairs as not to injure persons lawfully on the streets. They owed it to Nelson that his lawful use of the street should be substantially as safe as it was before the telegraph and railway plants had so occupied it. It was their plain duty not only to properly erect their plants but to maintain them in such condition as not to endanger the public.”

Manifestly this is the true rule. Highways are not for the benefit of private corporations although of a public service character, but for the convenience of the public, and when they are appropriated for any other purpose than ordinary public travel, reasonable care requires that the care proportioned to the danger must be exercised by such [645]*645corporations to protect the traveler from harm. This legal principle cannot be too often emphasized.

In Denver Consolidated Elec. Co. v. Simpson, 31 L. R. A. 566, 569 [21 Colo. 371; 41 Pac. Rep. 499, 501], it is held:

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Related

McKay & Roche v. Southern Bell Telephone Co.
111 Ala. 337 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1895)
City Electric Street Railway Co. v. Conery
31 L.R.A. 570 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1895)
Denver Consolidated Electric Co. v. Simpson
21 Colo. 371 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1895)
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. State ex rel. Nelson
33 A. 763 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1896)
Block v. Milwaukee Street Railway Co.
27 L.R.A. 365 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1895)
Electric Railway Co. v. Shelton
89 Tenn. 423 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 641, 4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burton-telephone-co-v-gordon-ohcirctgeauga-1904.