C. C. McKinney v. Appalachian Electric Power Company, a Corporation

261 F.2d 292, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3254
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 12, 1958
Docket7714
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 261 F.2d 292 (C. C. McKinney v. Appalachian Electric Power Company, a Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. C. McKinney v. Appalachian Electric Power Company, a Corporation, 261 F.2d 292, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3254 (4th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

SOBELOFF, Chief Judge.

This is the plaintiff’s appeal from an adverse judgment in a suit for damages for personal injuries. It was docketed in a state court of West Virginia, removed to the federal court and there tried by the District Judge, no jury trial having been prayed as provided in Rule 38 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A.

While carrying a television antenna mounted on a ten-foot pole across the defendant’s non-exclusive right of way on a mountainside in West Virginia, the plaintiff was severely burned when the antenna brushed against the defendant’s uninsulated 13,200-volt electrical wire which was suspended about fourteen and one-half feet from the ground. Suit was brought upon two separate theories of liability — first, violation of a statutory duty; second, common law negligence.

Section 232 of the National Electrical Safety Code, which has the force of statutory law in West Virginia, 1 provides that:

“The vertical clearance of all wires above ground in generally accessible places or above rails shall (as to open supply line wires and service drops conducting 750 volts to 15,000 volts) be no less than the following:
******
“(5) Spaces or ways accessible to pedestrians only ... 15 feet.” (Emphasis supplied.)

It is conceded that the defendant’s wires at the place where the plaintiff met injury were less than fifteen feet high. The District Court held that it was not a “generally accessible place” within the meaning of Section 232, and further that the defendant owed the plaintiff no common law duty to maintain the wires higher than the existing level of fourteen and one-half feet.

The basic facts are substantially undisputed. The defendant power company supplies electricity to the city of Corinne and other communities in a mountainous area of southern West Virginia. The city itself is in a valley at the bottom of Corinne Mountain. A public highway runs between the city and the base of the mountain. While the difference in elevation between the highway and the top of the mountain is only eight hundred feet, the distance up the mountain is seventeen hundred feet. Before 1932, two high voltage circuit lines of 88,000 and 13,200 volts, respectively, were constructed by the defendant. Beginning at the defendant’s substation in the valley, these lines connect with a steel high tower (Tower 2) midway up the mountain. From that point, the 88,000-volt line veers slightly to the left and extends 1,000 feet to Tower 3 at the top of the mountain, the line continuing at a minimum height of eighty feet above the ground. The 13,200-volt line, however, leaves Tower 2 and, instead of continuing to Tower 3, connects to wooden poles, which are substantially lower than the towers. These poles continue up *294 the mountain in a direction generally paralleling the 88,000 volt circuit. Pole No. 30 is the first pole above Tower 2; the next pole, No. 31, is farther up the mountain but seventy-five feet below Tower 3; and Pole No. 32 is located over the top of the mountain, past Tower 3. The plaintiff’s injuries occurred between Poles No. 31 and No. 32, about sixty feet from Tower 3. The defendant’s non-exclusive right of way under this 13,200-volt line is one hundred feet wide and was covered with a dense growth of shrubs and saplings approximately ten feet high. The defendant had last cut the undergrowth about eighteen months before the event out of which the litigation arises.

Because of the city’s low elevation, television reception is poor. Consequently, since 1951 many persons have constructed and maintained TV antennae systems on the mountain for residents of Corinne in the valley below. These systems are installed by locating TV antennae on the mountain and running cables and transmission lines from the antennae down the mountain to a central point in the city, and thence into the homes. In 1953 the plaintiff constructed his own antenna system on the mountain to service sixteen subscribers in the community.

Pedestrian travel on the mountain is normally limited to seasonal berry pickers, hunters and, at an increasing rate in recent years, those who maintain TV antennae and come to inspect their equipment about once a week. There are well-defined paths on the mountain, and one narrow road passes near the base of Tower 2. Although most of the TV systems are located in the Tower 2 area more than five hundred feet from the scene of the accident, some antennae are in close proximity to Tower 3, and one TV operator’s cable crosses the defendant’s right of way between Poles No. 31 and No. 32, where the plaintiff was injured.

On a day in June, 1956, the plaintiff removed one of his antennae near Tower 2 in order to relocate it in a place where a clearer signal could be obtained. After mounting the antenna on his ten-foot pole, he proceeded with it to a point where he eventually picked up a satisfactory signal near Tower 3. To avoid static interference from the power line, he decided to place the antenna farther across the mountain. Accordingly, he started to traverse the defendant’s right of way near Tower 3 and, because of the thick undergrowth, he elevated the pole above his head to protect the antenna. The plaintiff insists that he was unaware that the 88,000-volt line and the 13,200-volt line separated at Tower 2, and was under the impression as he moved away from the tower that he had cleared the lines, which he was led to believe were in any event eighty feet overhead and, therefore, no source of danger. He testified that due to the height of the undergrowth and the misleading appearances, he did not see the wire or the poles. The electric shock which he sustained when his antenna brushed against the 13,200-volt line rendered the plaintiff unconscious, and he suffered third degree burns to his right hand, resulting in a permanently atrophied and hypersensitive thumb.

Our problem in respect to subsection (5) of Section 232 concerns the interpretation of the phrase “spaces or ways accessible to pedestrians only." The defendant points to the introductory sentence of the Section, which pertains not alone to spaces and ways accessible to pedestrians only, where the prescribed elevation is fifteen feet, but also to streets, alleys, and roads in urban and rural districts, and to driveways to residence garages, where a twenty-foot elevation is required. The opening sentence delineates the over-all coverage of the entire section and speaks of “generally accessible places.” From this the defendant argues that the phrase in subsection (5), “spaces or ways accessible to pedestrians only,” means spaces or ways that are generally accessible. Adopting the defendant’s view, we are still left with the problem of interpreting the word “generally” itself. It may be granted that to give a reasonable con *295 struction to the word “accessible” in subsection (5), the notion of accessibility is not to be stretched to include every place to which it is physically possible for someone somehow to gain access.

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Related

Southern Maryland Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. Blanchard
212 A.2d 301 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1965)
Johnson v. Monongahela Power Company
123 S.E.2d 81 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1961)
Meeks v. Appalachian Power Co.
180 F. Supp. 469 (S.D. West Virginia, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 F.2d 292, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-c-mckinney-v-appalachian-electric-power-company-a-corporation-ca4-1958.