Craft v. Pocahontas Corp.

190 S.E. 687, 118 W. Va. 380, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 28
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1937
Docket8468
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 190 S.E. 687 (Craft v. Pocahontas Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Craft v. Pocahontas Corp., 190 S.E. 687, 118 W. Va. 380, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 28 (W. Va. 1937).

Opinion

Kenna, President :

This is an action for death by wrongful act tried in the Circuit Court of McDowell County. A verdict for $3,-000.00 was returned, which, on motion, the trial court *381 set aside. Thereupon, the plaintiff asked leave to amend her writ and declaration so as to lay damages at $10,000.-00 instead of $3,000.00, the amount for which the action had originally been brought. This was refused, and the plaintiff below prosecutes this writ of error, assigning as grounds for reversal the action of the trial court in setting aside the verdict for $3,000.00, and the action of the trial court in thereafter refusing the motion to amend the writ and declaration.

The first assignment of error hinges almost entirely upon the sufficiency of the evidence to make out a case of negligence against the Pocahontas Corporation. This assignment sub-divides itself into proposition (a) that no negligence whatever is shown by the • proof, and proposition (b) that in the event it should be thought that the proof establishes negligence on the part of someone, that such negligence was not the negligence of the Pocahontas Corporation.

The first question to be dealt with is whether the proof shows negligence that caused the death of the plaintiff’s decedent. Of course, in the light of the verdict favorable to her contention, we view the facts most favorably to the plaintiff, and they will be stated in that manner.

Plaintiff’s decedent came to his death sometime after dark on the evening of March 4, 1934, by coming in contact with a transmission line carrying 2300 volts of electricity. A rather full statement from the plaintiff’s standpoint of the circumstances surrounding the fatal accident is necessary in order to understand the theory of recovery upon which recovery was sought.

The defendant, Pocahontas Corporation, conducts a coal operation at Bishop, Virginia, 3.9 miles distant from Squire in McDowell County. Power for the operation at Bishop and for both towns, as well as for a few individual consumers residing between the two towns, is supplied by the Appalachian Electric Power Company which brings over its transmission lines 88,000 volts to Faraday where that voltage is “stepped down” by a transformer station from which 13,000 volts is carried to Bishop, where another transformer station sends on *382 2300 volts to Squire and beyond. The defendant company owns practically all of the land surrounding Bishop and the Appalachian Power Company rents its rights-of-way, transformer station, sites, etc., in that immediate vicinity from the defendant. All of the equipment for the transmission of electric power between Bishop and Squire, including the transformer station at Bishop, is owned by the Appalachian Electric Power Company.

On the evening of March 4, 1934, a storeroom owned by Charles Schrader on the right side of the dirt road leading from Squire to Bishop and not far from the town of Squire was destroyed by fire. Two transmission lines, each carrying 2300 volts, ran across the front of and just above the frame building, which fronted upon the highway. A few feet further in the direction of Bishop and slightly further back from the road, was a garage in which Mr. Schrader kept a truck, and still a little further toward Bishop was the Schrader home. Fire in the old store building seems to have gotten fairly well under way before it was noticed. When it was noticed, a congregation of people, numbering probably between 75 and 125, quickly gathered and many of them assisted in attempting to put out the fire and in preventing the nearby garage from taking fire.

In a little while, the transmission lines above the store building were burned through and fell, the ends toward Bishop coming to the ground and those toward Squire falling across the truck which had by then been taken out of the garage and was standing in the road. Neither end of the lines seems to have done any harm at the time that they fell. Shortly thereafter, plaintiff’s decedent, with two other boys, drove up from War to Squire and, noticing the fire by the light in the sky, continued toward Bishop to investigate. Coming to the place of the fire, plaintiff’s decedent got out of the automobile and began helping to take muddy water from the ditch which was across the road from the fire for the purpose of throwing it upon the fire and garage. He had been so engaged only a short while when he was heard to call out and immediately thereafter was seen entangled in one of *383 the wires toward Bishop which he had grasped near the end and which was wrapped around one of his legs. In an effort to extricate plaintiff’s decedent from the wire, Schrader himself was shocked into insensibility. Thereafter, Carl Pruitt took a dry coat and a jacket and pulled the wire away. Craft, plaintiff’s decedent, did not respond to efforts to resuscitate him.

The proof tends to establish that at the time the two wires parted and fell, the lights in the houses in the direction of Bishop, as well as those in the direction of Squire, from the place that the lines parted, went out, and that the ends of the lines toward Bishop lay in the wet and muddy road for something like fifteen minutes or longer before Craft became entangled in them, without any indication that they carried a deadly current. Between the time that the lines fell and the electrocution of Craft, many persons had passed over the ends of the fallen lines toward Bishop without suffering harm, although the evidence does not show that any other person actually came in contact with the wires. About the time that Craft became entangled in the wires, the lights toward Bishop came on dimly for a short time, and after Craft was electrocuted and the wires had been thrown over into the road out of the way, they were seen to flare and sparkle for some little time, indicating that then they carried current. After a time this ceased. Warnings had been shouted from the top of the garage by Mr. Pruitt, certainly after Craft was electrocuted and perhaps before, although there is no proof that Craft was in position at any time where he must have heard such warning. There was considerable excitement owing to the fire, and apparently a good deal of confusion.

While these events were taking place at and around the fire in the Schrader store, at Bishop some three miles away, other things were happening which, in our opinion, can be stated from the plaintiff’s viewpoint as follows: The lights at Bishop went out some little time after the fire at Schrader’s store began. This, of course, attracted the attention of a number of people at Bishop, among them, F. M. Shumate, the outside foreman and assistant *384 superintendent of the defendant company. Shumate came out of his- home and within a few minutes met J. R. Mc-Cutcheon, in charge of defendant’s lamp house at Bishop, Shumate at the time having gotten into his car and being headed toward Squire. At this time, there was a decided light in the sky in the direction of Squire, some of the witnesses testifying that they believed that the fire was at the tipple at Bishop, which was in the direction of Squire from where they were. After sending McCutcheon for Hall, the chief electrician of the defendant, with directions to send Hall to see what was wrong at the transformer at Bishop, Shumate continued toward Squire to find out what the trouble was.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Community Public Service Company v. Dugger
430 S.W.2d 713 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1968)
McCoy v. Cohen
140 S.E.2d 427 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1965)
Spencer v. Travelers Insurance Company
133 S.E.2d 735 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1963)
Peoples Supply, Inc. v. Vogel-Ritt Of Penn-Mar-Va.
273 F.2d 933 (Fourth Circuit, 1960)
Davis v. Fire Creek Fuel Company
109 S.E.2d 144 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1959)
Peoples Supply, Inc. v. Vogel-Ritt of Penn-Mar-Va., Inc.
173 F. Supp. 199 (N.D. West Virginia, 1958)
American Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Ohio Valley Sand Co.
50 S.E.2d 884 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1948)
Ferguson v. Pinson
50 S.E.2d 476 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 S.E. 687, 118 W. Va. 380, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craft-v-pocahontas-corp-wva-1937.