Duncan v. New River & Pocahontas Consolidated Coal Co.

174 S.E. 370, 114 W. Va. 388, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 88
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1933
Docket7519
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 174 S.E. 370 (Duncan v. New River & Pocahontas Consolidated Coal Co.) 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
Duncan v. New River & Pocahontas Consolidated Coal Co., 174 S.E. 370, 114 W. Va. 388, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 88 (W. Va. 1933).

Opinion

Henna, Judge:

C. W. Duncan, as administrator of the estate of Emma Louise Hornsby, in an action for death by wrongful act against New River & Pocahontas Consolidated Coal Company in the circuit court of Fayette County procured a judgment for $4,000.00, based upon a verdict for $7,000.00 reduced by order of the court to the amount of the judgment. To this judgment, the defendant prosecutes this writ of error. Plaintiff below assigns cross-error because of the reduction of the judgment below the amount of the verdict.

Plaintiff’s decedent was electrocuted by coming in contact with a wire fence around the property of her husband at or near Minden. The current causing her death had got into the wires of the fence as a consequence of a high voltage wire dropping, across it at a point some distance from the place that Mrs. Hornsby was at the time of her death. It is necessary to go into some detail as to the history, ownership, nature and position of the wires serving the plant of the defendant in order to arrive at the legal responsibility for Mrs. Hornsby’s death.

So far as the facts of this case are concerned, the Appalachian Electric Power Company has succeeded to all of the rights of the Virginian Power Company. During the War, the high power lines of the latter company extended from its plant at Cabin Creek through Fayette County to Scarbro. The United States Government, as one of its War undertakings, connected with this line at a point near Minden, taking off power at a tension of 44,000 volts to a transformer station at that point. At the Minden transformer, this power was stepped down to. 2300 volts, metered and carried beyond to the various operations of the defendant company, the most distant point so served being defendant’s shaft No. 5. All *390 of the line was constructed by the United States Government, the coal company merely making the connections to carry the current from the service line into its various operations. In 1919, the government sold these lines to the Yirginian Power Company and they finally became vested in the Appalachian Electric Power Company. In 1926, the defendant company purchased an operation at Kaymoor on the opposite side of New River. Wishing to electrify this plant, it approached the Appalachian Electric Power Company and an agreement was entered into by which, on condition that the defendant would install an additional transformer, the power company would put in three additional lines carrying 6600 volts from the transformer at Minden along the poles of the line that the government had built to the end of that line at or near defendant’s shaft No. 5, and would construct new poles carrying the new lines on to Kaymoor. This was done, the heavier voltage lines being carried beneath the 2300-volt line already on the poles erected by the government for the distance that those poles extended. The government had acquired a right of way from William Hornsby and plaintiff’s decedent, when it constructed the original line, so that at the time of Mrs. Plornsby’s death both the 2300-volt lines and the 6600-volt lines were carried across their property on the right of way her husband and she had granted and across which the wire fence around their property extended.

The evidence shows that for some two to four months before the accident one of the 2300-volt wires had become loose from the cross-arm on one of the poles supporting it near the Hornsby property and at or near the point where the line crossed that property. The peg holding the glass insulator in position on the cross-arm had come loose leaving the insulator swinging to the wire. This caused the line to be unsupported at this pole and for a distance of 253.5 feet between the poles next to the one where the line was loose. It was at or near the pole from which the wire had become loose that the 2300-volt line parted, falling across the 6600-volt line and in turn making contact with the fence around the Hornsby property.

Mrs. Hornsby’s death occurred about 2:00 p. M. on the 22nd day of May, 1931. Very shortly before the time of her death, there had been a copious rain accompanied by severe *391 thunder and lightning. There is no direct proof that these disturbances affected the wire.

In discussing the questions raised, we follow the order of the brief of plaintiff in error, making such other comment as seems justified.

The first assignment of error is that the trial court overruled defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s declaration. This demurrer was general and not in writing. It therefore cannot be considered here. Code, 56-4-36. Plaintiff in error insists that, regardless of demurrer, the declaration is bad because in it nowhere appears the individual name of the administrator of Emma Louise Hornsby. This is true. The declaration avers that the plaintiff sues as administrator of the estate of Emma Louise Hornsby and gives the date on which he was appointed and qualified as such in the county court of Payette County. No challenge was made in the court below of the fact that plaintiff was the administrator of the estate of Emma Louise Hornsby, neither was the failure to insert the individual name of the plaintiff in the declaration brought to the attention of the trial court in any manner whatsoever. It is urged here that this makes no difference, that the defect rendered the declaration a nullity, and that no proceedings could be had thereon under the authority of Poling v. Moore, 58 W. Va. 233, 52 S. E. 99. In that case, as appears from an inspection of the printed record, there was an utter failure to designate a defendant in any manner whatsoever. There was no possible way from the declaration to determine who was sued. Here, there is ample averment in the declaration to determine unmistakably the identity of the plaintiff. He is the administrator of the estate of Emma Louise Hornsby. There can be no other. The statute (Code, 55-7-6) provides that actions for death by wrongful act shall be brought by and in the name of the personal representative of the deceased. The purpose of the declaration is to inform the defendant to whom he must answer and for what. We believe that the declaration here substantially serves that purpose. This belief is fortified by the fact that the defendant was not heard to complain of the omission until the ease reached this court. There had been a full and fair trial with no complaint on *392 this account. It lias been held by this court that, although the appointment and qualification of a personal representative must be alleged and proven in actions for death by wrongful act, when the defendant appears and pleads to the merits the failure to make this averment is waived. The plea admits the character in which the plaintiff sues. Hanley, Adm’r. v. Railroad Co., 59 W. Va. 419, 53 S. E. 625. It is difficult to see why the same rule should not apply to the omission to name the individual who is the administrator, where it substantially appears from the declaration who sues. Here, we must presume that there was a regular praecipe and summons and that the declaration was filed in the action and regularly matured at rules. The declaration is identified by correct in-dorsement.- We have carefully examined the cases of Harvey v. Stokes, Willes 5, 125 Eng. Reprint 1026; Alexander v. Knox, 6 Sawy. 54, Fed. Cas. No. 170;

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.E. 370, 114 W. Va. 388, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duncan-v-new-river-pocahontas-consolidated-coal-co-wva-1933.