City of Logansport v. Green

135 N.E. 657, 192 Ind. 253, 1922 Ind. LEXIS 58
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1922
DocketNo. 23,860
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 135 N.E. 657 (City of Logansport v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Logansport v. Green, 135 N.E. 657, 192 Ind. 253, 1922 Ind. LEXIS 58 (Ind. 1922).

Opinion

Ewbank, J.

This was an action against the appellant city for damages for negligently causing the death of Harry M. Green, by electrocution. The complaint charged that the appellant city operated an electric light and power plant, and maintained a line of poles on Twenty-second street, in the city of Logansport, on which were hung certain wires, known as arc wires and primary wires, respectively, that carried dangerous and deadly currents of electricity of 2,300 volts or more, and also a service wire leading from a transformer to the residences of patrons carrying electricity for domestic use, which was designed to carry only 110 volts, an amount that would not kill nor seriously injure a person coming in contact with the wire; that said Green owned and occupied a residence on Smead street, near Twenty-second street, and was a patron of appellant; who furnished him with electric current for lighting his residence at fixed rates; that said low voltage service wire running from the transformer along Twenty-second street was diverted and passed along Smead street to his said residence; that said high voltage wires carrying the dangerous currents of electricity and said low voltage service wire extending to his residence were so negligently maintained by the appellant city, suspended from short cross arms on the same poles, so near each other and so close to and extending through the branches of living trees growing on said streets, that currents of electricity were liable to be and were thereby transmitted through the branches of such trees from the wires carrying high and deadly currents to the one which extended to said residence; that all of said facts were well known to appellant city; that on July 3, 1919, by reason of said negligence of appellant in so main[256]*256ing its electric wires, it negligently permitted the said dangerous and- deadly current of electricity to escape from its said high voltage wires into and .over said low voltage service wire and into the residence of said Green, where it set fire to the paper lining of a water pipe with which -the drop cord and wire screen surrounding an electric light bulb were in contact, and when Green, in ignorance that such deadly current of electricity had been carried, into his residence, or that the cord and wire screen were charged with electricity, touched the screen to withdraw it from the burning paper, the deadly current of electricity killed him; and that his death was proximately caused by said negligence'of the appellant city.

Appellant moved to make the complaint more specific and reserved an exception to the order overruling its motion. After the return of a verdict in favor of the plaintiff (appellee) for $8,000, appellant filed a motion for a new trial, specifying as errors the giving of certain instructions, the refusal to give certain others, and the admission of certain evidence. This motion was overruled and appellant excepted. Overruling the motions to make the complaint more specific and for a new trial, respectively, are the only alleged errors discussed in appellant’s brief.

The motion to make the complaint more specific asked that the plaintiff be required to state from which of the wires carrying a high voltage current the electricity escaped into the service wire, to state the location of the tree through which it escaped, the period of time during which it had been escaping, and just how, in detail, the high and deadly current could be transmitted and how it actually was transmitted, either from the arc wire or the primary wire to the service wire.

Without stopping to consider whether or not there was [257]*257merit in any specifications of this motion, it is sufficient to say that appellant was not harmed by the ruling complained of. The undisputed evidence showed that the service wire was hung on the_same poles as the arc wires and primary wires for the distance of only' one-half square, from the transformer in the middle of the block on Twenty-second street to the corner of Twenty-second and’ Smead streets, where the service wire turned and ran west along Smead street, while the high voltage wires continued north on Twenty-second street; and that there was only one tree in that half square, which was a water elm tree that stood near the corner of Smead and Twenty-second streets, and in the six years since it was plantéd (which was after the electric light wires were hung) had grown to seven inches in diameter, and so tall that its branches extended up among the wires and sometimes touched them, and that some of its top branches were found to be slightly burned after the death of plaintiff’s decedent. . And the defendant produced several witnesses who were employed in its lighting department in Logansport, and professed a knowledge of the trees on Smead and Twenty-second streets, and of the effect of green branches of trees as conductors of electric current. And questions as to which .precise wire of several hung on the same line of poles the deadly current escaped from, just how it acted in escaping, and for how long a period it had been escaping before the instant when plaintiff’s decedent was killed, must be answered from the consideration of facts which, so far as they were material on the question of appellant’s liability, were peculiarly within its own knowledge. Where evidence was introduced reasonably tending to prove that defendant city permitted the branches of a tree to grow up between its wires, hung only two or three feet apart, some of which carried a [258]*258deadly current of electricity, and one of which extended into decedent’s residence for the purpose of carrying an electric current of low voltage for domestic lighting, and that appellant knew of that condition, and that a branch of the tree touching two or more of those wires conducted the deadly current into the service wire, even momentarily, and thereby caused the death of a patron of the electric light service without his fault, any further explanation of the precise manner in which the deadly current was communicated to the service wire would constitute matter of defense, and should come from the appellant company, by way of rebutting the prima facie charge of negligence thus made out.

The death of appellant’s decedent occurred on the evening of July 8, 1919. Over an objection and exception by appellant a witness was permitted to testify that on April 10, 1919, the branches of shade trees on Smead street a few yards east of decedent’s residence, through which the low voltage service wire extended, were set on fire; that the fire would come down through those trees, and go all through them; and another witness was permitted to testify that at some time in the early spring of that year he saw the wires on limbs of the trees on Smead street, just east of decedent’s residence, on fire and blazing up two or three feet, and called the Fifteenth street station of the city fire department, and that upon a telephone order from the officer in charge of the men who came in answer to that call the electric current was shut off; without objection he further testified that said officer called up the electric plant and said to send over a trouble man. A third witness was permitted to testify over like objection and exception that early in March or the first of April that year he saw a fire in the trees on Smead street, east of decedent’s residence, near the low voltage [259]*259service wire.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 N.E. 657, 192 Ind. 253, 1922 Ind. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-logansport-v-green-ind-1922.