Cornucopia Gold Mines v. Locken

150 F.2d 75, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2737
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 29, 1945
DocketNo. 10918
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 150 F.2d 75 (Cornucopia Gold Mines v. Locken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cornucopia Gold Mines v. Locken, 150 F.2d 75, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2737 (9th Cir. 1945).

Opinion

BOWEN, District Judge.

On May 20, 1942, the decedent, Anna Locken, was electrocuted by coming in contact with one of the wires of appellant’s 2300-volt electric transmission line while she was walking in Red Jacket Canyon in the Wallowa Mountains near the town of Cornucopia, about fifty miles northeast of Baker, Oregon. This action, commenced in the State Court and, because of diversity of citizenship, removed to the Federal Court, was brought by decedent’s widower on behalf of himself and the three minor children of decedent to recover damages for the wrongful death of decedent. The Court below, sitting without a jury, granted plaintiff judgment from which defendant appeals.

On the day of the accident, about 1 o’clock in the afternoon, the decedent, who was a visitor at her mother’s home in Cornucopia, left Cornucopia with her mother to look for mushrooms. They walked along a generally travelled dirt road which extends about 1% miles between Cornucopia and appellant’s Union mine. This road crosses Red Jacket Canyon in close proximity to that Canyon crossing of appellant’s transmission line more fully described later. About a quarter of a mile up the road from Cornucopia decedent’s mother stopped to pile up stones to repair a ditch and divert a flow of water, but the decedent continued on up the road and disap[76]*76peared from her mother’s view. After-wards her mother was unable to find her and enlisted the aid of a neighbor who was familiar with the country, and who, after one unsuccessful search, and after the lapse of several hours', finally found the decedent’s lifeless body lying under the south wire of appellant’s transmission line in a gully in Red Jacket Canyon about 250 feet from the road, where appellant’s electric transmission line spans about 500 feet across the Canyon.

When the decedent’s body was found the left hand clasped a paper bag and a small metal pipe, the fingers of the right hand were scorched and burned as if from contact with an energized electric wire, and the fallen or sagging electric transmission wirfe was about 4 inches above the body. The transmission wire near the body was resting on brush of size and color similar to those of the wire. Nearby there were spots where fires had started and burned out in the brush. Some of the brush was still smoking a little when the neighbor after locating decedent’s body and unaware of the presence of the wire approached the place where the body lay, and his pants legs contacted the smoking brush and started the wire to buzzing. This was reported to the acting mines superintendent who shut off the power before the body was removed.

Appellant has a mine at Cornucopia where it operates a generating plant to supply electricity to that town and to its mine there, and about six years before the accident appellant installed, and at the time of the accident maintained, a 3-wire electric transmission line including the wire in question to transmit electricity from its Cornucopia generating plant to its Union Mine about 1% miles farther up the mountain. For several months prior to the accident appellant’s Cornucopia and Union mines were closed down, but its Cornucopia generating plant was kept operating to supply electricity to the town of Cornucopia and to keep the mine motors warm and free from moisture damage, and the transmission line to the Union mine was energized for the latter purpose on the day of the accident. No skilled line maintenance men or inspectors were then on duty and none had been retained for several months prior to the accident, although the mines’ acting superintendent had as he passed along the road casually observed the transmission line about a week before the accident and from time to time before that, but had not noticed anything wrong with the transmission wires.

By a pre-trial order superseding the pleadings the important questions reserved for the trial were (1) whether in maintaining its transmission line the appellant negligently caused decedent’s death; (2) whether in coming in contact with the transmission line wire, decedent was contributorily negligent; (3) whether at the time decedent contacted the wire she was then on appellant’s land; and (4) whether decedent was then a trespasser on defendant’s land.

The trial judge from ample supporting evidence found that the road in question was a generally travelled dirt road; that some of the adjoining lands in the Canyon had been located as mining claims, some by appellant and -some by other persons; that the boundaries of the claims had not been clearly marked nor by the evidence certainly established; that the lands in the Canyon near the road and the place where decedent was electrocuted had for many years been travelled and crossed by the public generally without objection from anyone; that no danger or warning signs had at the time of or prior to decedent’s death been placed on or near any of the Canyon properties; and that the transmission wire fell and came to rest on brush and vegetation near the ground because of insufficient fastenings and supports which permitted the wire to part from its connections and fastenings at a supporting pole and come to rest on brush and vegetation near the ground.

The Court below rightly concluded that other persons as well as appellant owned land or mining claims in the Canyon under appellant’s transmission line; that appellant knew or should have known that other persons had a right to, and did customarily, walk and travel on and across the lands in the Canyon under appellant’s transmission line near where decedent was electrocuted ; that owing to the condition of brush and vegetation surrounding the fallen wire, it virtually constituted a trap for any one walking or travelling in the Canyon, and that any reasonable person operating or maintaining a charged transmission wire which had fallen and was allowed to remain, on such brush and vegetation would know that the wire would likely cause death or injury to anyone travelling in the [77]*77Canyon, irrespective of whose land was being traversed;

That appellant negligently caused decedent’s death by constructing and maintaining a high-voltage transmission wire of materials with strength insufficient for self-support, with improper fastenings and supports, and without any safeguards to keep the wire from coming close to the ground if it came loose; by neglecting to properly replace, repair and maintain the wire and its connections and fastenings at and near its supporting poles, and by neglecting to install in the Canyon a sufficient number of wire supporting poles; by neglecting to properly patrol, and to provide a sufficient number of patrolmen to watch, the transmission line and report any broken or dangerous condition; by failing to learn and know of the fallen wire and by allowing it to remain down across the Canyon in the brush under the transmission line for an unreasonable length of time prior to decedent’s death; by allowing the wire to part from its supports and remain near the ground so that anyone travelling in the Canyon near the wire would come in contact with it; and by neglecting to keep the ground under the transmission line cleared of brush and vegetation so that a broken or fallen transmission wire would remain visible and would not by such brush and vegetation become concealed from the view of those travelling in the Canyon;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 F.2d 75, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cornucopia-gold-mines-v-locken-ca9-1945.