Coulon v. City of Alexandria

44 So. 2d 171, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 458
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 4, 1950
DocketNo. 7366
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 44 So. 2d 171 (Coulon v. City of Alexandria) 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
Coulon v. City of Alexandria, 44 So. 2d 171, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 458 (La. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinions

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

The learned trial judge has favored us with written reasons for the judgment rendered by him in this case, wherein he clearly marshals the essential facts, resolves them against the plaintiff, and applies law appropriate thereto. We adopt said reasons as our own, supplementing same to the extent we deem necessary, the whole to constitute the opinion of this Court, viz.:

“This suit is action in tort by the plaintiff against the ICity of Alexandria, seeking damages for personal injuries which he sustained on June 9, 1945, which damages were sustained by the plaintiff under the following conditions and circumstances:
“The City of Alexandria owns and operates its water system in connection with its other public utilities and in connection therewith owns and operates a pumping station approximately seven miles out in the country from the city limits. The pump house is a small brick structure which is shown in the different photographs, which are found in the record.
“Approximately seventy or seventy-five feet from the pump house is a transformer station which is necessary for the operation of the pumps and electric lights about the premises. The electric wires lead off from poles at the transformer station and entered the pump house. There were eight wires, six being what is referred to in the testimony as primary wires which carried 2300 volts and two wires which carried 110 volts and referred to in the testimony as secondary wires. They will be referred to as such in this opinion. The primary wires were not insulated and left the poles at the transformer station twenty-four feet above the ground and directly beneath them at a distance of six feet the secondary wires left the poles and all of them entered the pump house at the same level of 10% feet above the level of the ground. In other words, seventy or seventy-five feet away there was a perpendicular difference between" the wires of six feet and they gradually converged to the same level at the pump house. Laterally the secondary wires entered the pump house two feet to the left of the primary wires looking from the transformer station to the pump house. The primary wires were fifteen inches apart at their entrance. The secondary wires were insulated and it seems from the testimony that all of the wires carrying low voltage are ordinarily insulated. There was no evidence as to the reason for the high voltage wires not being insulated but I assume that because of their size they are hot usually insulated.
“In 1945 this area suffered from flood waters and it was necessary to build a levee by means of sand bags around this pump house. As the primary wires were 10% feet above the ground at that point, the City protected the workmen who might come in contact therewith in the use of spades and similar instruments, by placing a loose rubber covering over those wires which extended out ten or twelve feet from the building. They are referred to in the testimony as rubber guts and from the testimony it appears that they remained thereon until the time of this accident.
“Because of the fact that the elevation of the ground at the pump house was too low the City entered into a contract with Vardaman Ferguson to haul dirt and to build up and raise the elevation around the pump house to a height of approximately three feet at the house and tapering off to a zero point one hundred feet in every direction around it. Mr. Ferguson employed trucks to haul dirt and a bulldozer to spread the same in this process. Mr. Coulon, the plaintiff, was the operator of' the bulldozer and while operating underneath the wires both of his hands came in contact therewith and practically burned them off' and this suit followed.
“The insurance carrier for Mr. Ferguson intervened for compensation which it had paid the plaintiff and which, is set out in detail, both in the pleadings and the evidence/and concerning which there is no controversy.
[173]*173"There is a sharp controversy as to how the accident happened and the able counsel for the plaintiff urges neg'ligence on the part of the City of Alexandria as the proximate cause of the injury. The principal controversy concerns the facts immediately connected with the injury but none as to the extent of the injury for the plaintiff was very painfully and severely injured. Fortunately, he did not lose his life. The fact that he did not seems miraculous.
“The City of Alexandria realized that it was dangerous to conduct the operations in close proximity to the primary wires and provided a guard to be on duty at all times to warn all of the employees of the dangerous nature of the operation near the wires and to warn them sufficiently to keep them from coming in contact therewith. Counsel for the plaintiff rest their case largely upon the contentions that the wires sagged between the transformer station and the pump house and were not sufficiently raised from the ground to prevent injury to the employees and especially were they lower than provided by safety rules of United States Department of Commerce, which rules were introduced in evidence and provide for a clearance of twenty feet between such wires and the ground. Further, that the City placed guards at the scene to prevent workmen from coming into contact with the wires and that they were negligent in the performance of their duties in permitting the plaintiff, who was ignorant of the danger, to continue to operate underneath them and to gradually raise the level of the ground to a sufficient height to ■bring the plaintiff and his machine to such close proximity that while he was spreading dirt underneath the wires he was suddenly confronted with wires in his face and threw up his hands to ward them off; as he threw his hands up against the wires they came in contact with the primary wires and resulted in the injury. They further contend that Coulon had no knowledge of the high voltage wire or the danger that might result in coming in contact with them, that they negligently failed to protect him and he came in contact through the negligence of the City and through no fault of his.
“Due to the conclusion to which I have come after careful study of this record, I do not deem it necessary for me to pass- on whether or not the City was negligent. I shall not attempt to analyze all of the evidence in detail. To do so would unnecessarily lengthen this opinion. I am of the opinion that- the plaintiff was negligent and that his severe injuries were due to that negligence which was the proximate cause of the accident.

“The wires from the transformer station undoubtedly sagged as might be expected of all wires. The evidence showed that approximately twelve feet from the pump house the secondary wires were underneath the primary wires a distance of approximately six inches. Of course, that distance increased as you follow the wires back towards the transformer station. The evidence shows that a short time 'before the accident the employees of the City of Alexandria had raised three of the primary wires by raising a temporary cross arm.' Witnesses for the plaintiff gave negative testimony in that they had not observed the same, but I am of 'the opinion that it is of relative unimportance for the reason they did not raise all of the primary wires and did not raise the two secondary wires which continued to hang approximately eight or nine feet above the ground at a distance of approximately twelve feet from the pump house.

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Bluebook (online)
44 So. 2d 171, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coulon-v-city-of-alexandria-lactapp-1950.