Calton v. Louisiana Power & Light Co.

56 So. 2d 862, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 473
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 30, 1952
Docket7769
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 56 So. 2d 862 (Calton v. Louisiana Power & Light 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
Calton v. Louisiana Power & Light Co., 56 So. 2d 862, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 473 (La. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

56 So.2d 862 (1952)

CALTON
v.
LOUISIANA POWER & LIGHT CO.

No. 7769.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

January 30, 1952.
Rehearing Denied March 30, 1952.

*863 Campbell & Campbell, Minden, Dimick & Hamilton, Shreveport, for appellant.

Theus, Grisham, Davis & Leigh, Monroe, for appellee.

GLADNEY, Judge.

From a judgment rejecting plaintiff's demand this appeal is prosecuted. Suit was brought by the mother of George Sterling for damages arising from his accidental death by electrocution on February 14, 1949. At the time of the accident Sterling was employed as a helper upon a machine known as a log loader belonging to Pace Brothers Lumber Company, Inc., which company operated a sawmill about four miles north of Minden on what is known as Dorcheat Highway. There was erected upon the log loader a boom which contacted defendant's high voltage electric line when the driver of the loader was attempting to take the machine under the line. Sterling, after dismounting from the loader, touched the charged machine, thus bringing into his body enough electricity to cause his death.

There is no serious dispute as to any of the material facts. Near the scene of the accident a gravel road takes off from the Dorcheat Road running northeasterly into the property of the sawmill company. Defendant's electric line, charged with 13,800 volts between wires and 8,000 volts to ground, crosses the sawmill property near its south edge. The line is what is described as a three-phase grounded circuit, consisting of three conductors or wires which carry electricity, and a fourth wire which is a neutral or ground wire, the purpose of which is to ground the circuit, but which does not carry electricity. In order to furnish lights for the sawmill, some years ago the defendant company constructed a small line which was adequate for such purpose. Later when the mill constructed a planing mill, a high voltage line was required in order to supply this demand. The line so constructed crosses the road, referred to as the mill road, and on which the accident occurred, at a sharp angle. At the time of the accident, the first span coming off the blacktop or Dorcheat Road was 482.5 feet in length, that is to say there was this distance between the first and second poles. On the Dorcheat Road the wires took off from a 40' pole set 6' into the ground, the wires being strung on an 8' cross arm, set approximately 4' from the top of the pole. The effect of this was to place defendant's electric line approximately 30' from the ground, when measured near the pole. The next pole to the east was a 35' pole set 5½' in the ground with the wire strung on a cross arm located 6" from the top of the pole, causing the elevation of the wires at that end of the span to be 29' above the ground. The gravel or mill road crosses under this span approximately in the middle. Defendant's line at the point of crossing and the place where the accident occurred was at the time of the accident slightly more than 23' above the ground.

The log loader upon which the deceased was employed and which was involved in this accident, consisted of the metal frame of a Chevrolet truck, with a boom hinged on the back end, which could be raised or lowered by means of a Ford motor fastened to the framework of the truck behind the driver. The boom on this loader was 19' 10½" in length and was hinged to an "eyebeam frame" 42" from the ground, and at the time of the accident was being carried in its normal operating position, which was at an angle of about seventy-five degrees or eighty degrees. When extended *864 straight up in the air the overall height of the boom from the ground would be 23' 6½"; at an angle of eighty degrees the tip of the boom would be 3½ lower; and at an angle of seventy-five degrees it would be 6.7 inches lower than in the vertical position. It would, therefore, appear that this log loader as it was being carried at the time of the accident, could not safely pass under the line at this point, and due to any uneveness of the road it could be expected to make contact with the line.

On the morning of the accident the log loader had been carried out into the woods and when the accident took place it was being returned to the lumber yard. When the log loader left the yard in the morning the boom was lowered in order to pass under the line. The boom was lowered by means of a motor on the truck, operated by the driver, which operation is preceded by the removal of a pin which holds the pipe on which the cable supporting the boom is wrapped. When lowered on its outward trip, George Sterling took out the pin which held the pipe. On the return trip to the mill Mr. Bailiff, the driver, undertook to drive the log loader under the line without lowering the boom. As Bailiff approached the line George Sterling who was riding on the body of the motor, declared he was not going to ride under the wire. As the loader reached a point under the wire and a distance of six or eight inches from the wire, according to the testimony of most, if not all, of plaintiff's witnesses, the loader was brought to a stop. At this point George Sterling jumped off the loader and took two or three steps towards the rear end of the loader. A. L. Burkhalter testified he "holloed for him not to go around the back and he fell in or was sucked in or something to the sprocket". Bailiff, after bringing the truck to a stop, jumped off on the left side of the truck and walked around to the other side where he saw the body of George Sterling jammed against the loader with his chin right up against the sprocket. Bailiff then got back into the truck and backed it away so as to free the body from its contact with the machine. Sterling was still breathing but by the time he was taken into town he was dead.

At the time of this tragic accident plaintiff, the mother of the deceased, was standing on her porch, probably not more than 50' distant, and witnessed the killing of her son. George Sterling had never been married and had lived with his mother all of his life. It was shown that he contributed substantially to her maintenance and support, although at the time of her son's death she was married to Amos Calton.

Several acts of negligence are charged to defendant as the basis of appellant's suit. For discussion we have grouped the alleged acts of negligence into two main charges: The first is that defendant owned and operated a heavily loaded power line negligently strung and maintained upon poles at an excessive distance apart, and that by reason of such excessive distance between the two poles, the wires sagged so much as to greatly interfere with and endanger those engaged in traveling along the above referred to gravel road, or working about the mill yard. The second allegation of negligence deals with the failure of defendant to properly insulate the wires in question or to place them at a sufficient height to protect the users of log loaders in and about the mill yard. It is alleged officials of the electric company knew sawmills used booms and derricks extending many feet into the air, and that with such knowledge the company should have either raised said lines to a safe height or insulated the wires in order to provide adequate protection to the general public.

In our domestic and industrial progress electricity has played an important part, and its distribution has in recent years carried electric service to remote areas, and we are now as a general rule better informed as to its highly dangerous aspects than in former years.

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Bluebook (online)
56 So. 2d 862, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calton-v-louisiana-power-light-co-lactapp-1952.