Delta Electric Power Ass'n v. Burton

126 So. 2d 258, 240 Miss. 209, 1961 Miss. LEXIS 451
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1961
Docket41648
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 126 So. 2d 258 (Delta Electric Power Ass'n v. Burton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delta Electric Power Ass'n v. Burton, 126 So. 2d 258, 240 Miss. 209, 1961 Miss. LEXIS 451 (Mich. 1961).

Opinion

*214 Gillespie, J.

Appellees, plaintiffs below, the suriving husband and seven children of Mrs. Nancy Burton, deceased, sued appellant, Delta Electric Power Association, a corpora *215 tion organized as a cooperative for the distribution of electricity under Chapter 184, Laws of 1936, and amendatory acts. In general, the action was brought under the wrongful death statute and the negligence charged was that appellant negligently maintained its power lines proximately resulting in the death of Mrs. Burton.

We state the facts in the light most favorable to appellees, for whom the jury found a verdict for $10,000. There is very little conflict in the evidence.

In 1941 appellant constructed electric distribution lines over and across certain lands now known as Lembo Plantation. This was done by permission of the owner, but no written easement was shown. At that time the store and residence hereafter mention had not been built and the lines were properly constructed in a safe manner and in accordance with safety standards of the industry. These power lines ran north and south. In 1948 there was erected a rectangular masonry building, 54 feet north and south by 24 feet east and west, facing south on a local roadway. The southeast corner of this building was 22 feet eight inches west from the perpendicular plane of appellant’s power lines, and the northeast corner of the building was 7 feet 10% inches west of the perpendicular plane of said power lines. Sometime thereafter a shed about 18 feet north and south by 14 feet 8 inches east and west was added to the south end of the east side of the masonry building. The building was used as the headquarters of the Lembo Plantation, and at the time of the accident involved in this case the deceased and her husband and family lived in the rear part and a store was operated in the front, or south, part. Deceased’s husband, E. E. Burton, one of the plaintiffs below, and one of the appellees here, was the manager of the plantation beginning September 16, 1956, until Mrs. Burton’s death on February 10, 1958.

After construction of the aforesaid shed, which was long before the Burtons moved into the building, the appellant’s power lines were on a perpendicular plane *216 8 feet easterly from the southeast corner of the shed and 2 feet 8 inches from the northeast corner. The power lines consisted of three wires. The top wire was 28 feet 2 inches above the ground and carried 7,620 volts of electricity. Below that was a neutral wire 24 feet 7% inches above the ground. The bottom, or “take-off”, wire was 22 feet 10 inches above the ground and it carried 120 volts.

On September 16, 1956, with the help of some of the farm laborers, Burton erected a television antenna. This antenna was a type that telescoped. The base of the antenna was fastened to the northerly side of the aforesaid shed 2 feet 2% inches easterly from the masonry building, which placed the antenna 14 feet 6 inches from the perpendicular plane of the power lines. The antenna was 34 feet 6 inches high, or about 6 feet 4 inches taller than the top power line, and nearly 12 feet taller than the lowest of the power lines. The power lines were not insulated. The antenna had near the top two sets of rods which could be turned with a rotator. The rods were 3 or 4 feet long.

In June 1957, a storm blew down the antenna. It fell west away from the power lines and rested on the top of the building. E. B. Burton put it back up with the help of farm labor, but it was slightly bent so that thereafter it could not be telescoped.

On February 10, 1958, the day Mrs. Burton was killed, E. B. Burton decided to lower the antenna and replace a rod that had come loose from the top. The antenna was held by three guy wires fastened to the top of the building. Burton sent his two sons, ages 10 and 15, on top of the building, where each boy unfastened a guy wire and held to it. Burton unfastened the other. The boys held the two guy wires to keep the antenna from falling toward the power lines. Burton attempted to lower the antenna by walking backwards, hands over head, holding the antenna and lowering it. He walked northward about two feet from the easterly wall of the mason *217 ry building. When tbe antenna was at about a sixty degree angle, tbe bottom began to “kick up” at about tbe same time that Mrs. Burton came around tbe bouse and asked if sbe could belp. Burton told ber to bold tbe base of tbe tower and sbe took bold of it. Almost immediately there was a noise of arcing current. Burton, wbo was wearing rubber boots, was knocked loose from tbe pole, but Mrs. Burton was fatally shocked and died in about fifteen minutes. Burton was positive tbe antenna did not touch tbe power lines but it is evident it got close enough for tbe current to flow down tbe antenna.

Tbe record is clear that appellant’s employees bad seen tbe antenna and its relation to tbe power lines during tbe period from September 16, 1956 to February 10, 1958. One of tbe employees came to tbe store residence to restore service after tbe storm in June 1957 and saw tbe antenna blown across tbe bouse. Meter readers saw tbe antenna numerous times. So tbe question of notice to appellant is not a subject of argument.

Mr. Burton knew that electricity would shock but bad bad little experience with it. He did not know tbe voltage carried by tbe power lines and tbe jury was justified in believing that be did not appreciate tbe danger. Four-County Electric Power Assn. v. Clardy, 221 Miss. 403, 73 So. 2d 144. It was shown that it was not an uncommon practice in tbe general area for property owners to raise and lower their own television antennas without tbe aid of experts.

Both parties introduced qualified experts in tbe field of electrical engineering wbo were familiar with tbe standards of practice in constructing and maintaining electric power lines.

Appellees’ expert testified that tbe standards established for tbe safe construction of electric power lines are tbe same as those for tbe maintenance of such lines, and that a situation which would be regarded as unsafe for construction purposes would be unsafe as a maintenance condition. He further testified that tbe maintenance of *218 the electric power lines in question as close as they were to the taller television antenna was unsafe and dangerous; that any contact between the antenna and power lines would conduct a tremendous flow of electricity with attendant danger of fire and shock; that standard practice dictated that the condition existing at the place in question be eliminated in some way. Appellees’ chief electrical engineer testified that when conditions are the same, the standards are the same for construction and maintenance. He admitted that the conditions described above were not the best practice and that if he had personally been there prior to the accident he would have recommended that the antenna be relocated. Another electrical engineer testifying for appellant testified that there was no hazard from the position of the power lines and the antenna other than from natural causes.

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Bluebook (online)
126 So. 2d 258, 240 Miss. 209, 1961 Miss. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delta-electric-power-assn-v-burton-miss-1961.