Donnelly v. Lehigh Navigation Electric Co.

102 A. 219, 258 Pa. 580, 1917 Pa. LEXIS 889
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 30, 1917
DocketAppeal, No. 86
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 102 A. 219 (Donnelly v. Lehigh Navigation Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donnelly v. Lehigh Navigation Electric Co., 102 A. 219, 258 Pa. 580, 1917 Pa. LEXIS 889 (Pa. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Moschziskee,

August 27, 1915; John H. Donnelly, a lineman, was killed by contact with an electric current, while working upon certain wires owned and maintained by his employer '; deceased’s widow sued in trespass, alleging negligence, and recovered a verdict for $2,420, upon which judgment was entered; defendant has appealed, and complains because the court below refused to enter judgment in its favor non obstante veredicto.

_ At the time of the casualty, Donnelly was perched upon a cross-arm, engaged in “tapping” or connecting wires which were insulated according to the customary method used for outside electric lines; these wires carried a current of 4,400 volts. Other lines of defendant company, carrying 22,000 volts, ran on the same pole, immediately over Donnelly’s head, and to each of these [584]*584latter wires a switch was attached, the one here concerned being open and alive, with its blade, bar, or needle hanging down.

Plaintiff introduced no positive testimony to show whether her husband’s death was due to contact with the lower or higher voltage lines, either of which was sufficient to kill. It was proved, however, that the dead man’s head was burned; and an examination of the hanging switch blade disclosed several singed hairs thereon. These circumstances were enough to justify a finding that Donnelly’s head had touched the higher voltage wires; but, since his body showed burns on the left leg and other parts, all the witnesses called by plaintiff were obliged to admit they did not, as a matter of fact, know which contact was responsible for the fatality.

It appears that, in the end, the deceased fell prostrate upon the 4,400-volt line; and, in this connection, certain of plaintiff’s experts testified that “contact with a highly charged object......sometimes will throw...... a human being,” and, after receiving a shock from the 4,400-volt wires, if Donnelly “had his legs on [that] ......line, it would never have held him there.” All of which, if believed, indicates that touching the upper rather than the lower wires was the cause of death in the present instance; but from the testimony of a man named Urban, an alleged eye witness for the defense, it would appear that Donnelly first came in contact with the 4,400-volt line, whereupon “he straightened up, his head struck the needle of the switch......and that knocked him back and he fell across these [the lower voltage] wires.”

On Mr. Urban’s testimony, defendant contends that, the former being the only person who even asserted that he saw Donnelly’s actions immediately before and at the time of the latter’s death, in the absence of specific contradiction, the jury was bound to accept his evidence as conclusive, and thereunder only one finding was pos-

[585]*585sible, i. e., that contact with the lower voltage wires was the fatal one. Later in this witness’s examination, however, he said, “That [indicating the needle] is what fixed •his feet” [evidently meaning “what caused Donnelly’s death”]; and, when subsequently called to the stand, defendant’s foreman flatly contradicted certain parts of Mr. Urban’s testimony, thereby impeaching his credibility. Under these circumstances, it cannot be said the jury were bound to accept the word of defendant’s witness as verity.

If as a matter of fact the higher voltage wires caused Donnelly’s death, and if, (according to the customary method used by electric companies), when a switch of the character of the one in this case is found with its blade hanging down, this indicates that the line is dead at that point, as was testified by several of plaintiff’s experts, then the evidence relied upon by plaintiff was amply sufficient to sustain a finding that the method of installing switches followed in the present instance, i. e., so they would have the blade hanging down with the wire alive, was out of the ordinary, and much more dangerous than the customary arrangement employed by others in the same line of business. Although this testimony, that a hanging switch blade indicates'a dead wire, was denied by some of defendant’s witnesses, yet, since believed by the jury, we must, for present purposes, accept it as true; and thereunder, if contact with the live switch was the proximate cause of the accident, defendant company was guilty of such negligence as would make it responsible to plaintiff for the death of her husband.

The position taken by defendant, however, is that, even conceding, for the sake of argument, its switch was negligently constructed and, when Donnelly saw the needle hanging down, he had a right to assume it was dead, yet there can be no recovery here, since the evidence relied upon by plaintiff does not make it plain whether it was this alleged negligence or contact by de[586]*586ceased with the lower voltage wires which caused the fatality. This contention is based upon the theory that, when defendant set Donnelly to work upon the 4,400-volt wires, he, and not it, assumed all risks therefrom; but there was abundance of testimony produced by plaintiff, and not very strenuously denied, to the effect that, in the electrical business, it had been and was customary for employers to furnish linemen with what are termed “pigs,” or “piggies” (hollow cylinders of rubber, about three feet long, which, after being clasped about live wires, render the latter innocuous to those who may touch or come in contact with them), and that defendant had failed to observe this custom, its men never having been supplied with such safety appliance or any efficient substitute therefor. Moreover, it was proved by plaintiff’s witnesses and admitted by those of defendant that, if Donnelly had been furnished this device, the accident which caused his untimely death would, in all probability, have been avoided; and, in view of this testimony, plaintiff contends that, if contact with the lower voltage wires was the proximate cause of her husband’s death, then his employer was guilty of negligence in failing to furnish him with the usual and ordinary protection against that danger, and the defense of assumption of risk would not avail.

It is established in our law that “electric companies are bound to use the highest degree of care practicable to avoid injury to every one who may be in lawful proximity to their wires” (Haertel v. Pennsylvania Light & Power Co., 219 Pa. 640, 643; Fitzgerald v. Edison Electric Illuminating Co., 200 Pa. 540, 543; Yeager v. Edison Electric Co., 246 Pa. 434, 436), including employees, and that, in the fulfilment of this obligation, it is the duty of such a company to know what safety appliances are suitable and in “common and ordinary use” for the protection of men employed to work in close proximity to currents which may prove fatal (Bannon v. Lutz, 158 Pa. 166, 174; Morrison v. So. Penn Oil Co., 247 Pa. [587]*587263, 266).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 A. 219, 258 Pa. 580, 1917 Pa. LEXIS 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donnelly-v-lehigh-navigation-electric-co-pa-1917.