Elias v. Mayor of New Iberia

69 So. 141, 137 La. 691, 1915 La. LEXIS 1739
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 11, 1915
DocketNo. 20130
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 69 So. 141 (Elias v. Mayor of New Iberia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elias v. Mayor of New Iberia, 69 So. 141, 137 La. 691, 1915 La. LEXIS 1739 (La. 1915).

Opinion

PROVOSTY, J.

The defendant city furnishes electrical light and power to its inhabitants, and charges for the service, the same as a private corporation might.do.

Plaintiff’s wife fell dead while' she was in the act of hanging a wet sheet upon a wire clothesline in the back yard of her residence. The cause of her death is one of the points in dispute. Plaintiff contends that the wire clothesline had' become charged with electricity from the electrical light wire of the defendant, and that she was electrocuted. Defendant contends that she died of heart failure, or apoplexy, or some other internal cause. The ground on which the woman stood was wet from rain, and the sheet and her hands were wet; so that she completed the circuit for the death-dealing fluid, if the fluid was present in the wire. Was it?

The wire clothesline passed under an electric light wire between the house and the store of plaintiff, and went to a wooden post in the back yard of plaintiff’s house, and from this wooden post it went to another wooden post in the back yard. This clothesline was raised by some one with a clothesline pole, and thereby brought in contact with the light wire. Who did this is not ascertained. But it was some one in plaintiff's household; most probably the colored girl who on the occasion in question was helping plaintiff’s wife in the washing.

[1] One of the contentions of defendant is that the clothesline was in two sections, one extending between the two wooden posts, and the other, the one which was in contact with the electric light wire, extending from one of the wooden posts to the front, and that there was a space of an inch or two between them on the wooden post to which they were fastened.

Two witnesses produced by defendant so testified. One of them was a member of the electric light and water board of the city, and was therefore' one of the officials Who would have to bear the burden of the blame should a judgment in damages be rendered against the city. This official went to the place and made an investigation as soon as he heard of the event, and took with him a Mr. Cardova, one of the employes of the light and power plant, with his instrument for making a test. They reached the place about an hour and a half after the event. It was then the witness ascertained, as he says, this discontinuity of the clothesline. Notwithstanding this discovery, which was proof conclusive against the’theory of an electrocution —for, if the clothesline was in two disconnected sections, the electric current could not possibly have passed from the section which was in contact with the electric wire to the one upon which the sheet was hung— .the witness proceeded to have a test made of the electric wire for ascertaining its voltage, and found the usual voltage of 110.

In his statement regarding this discontinuity in the clothesline he is corroborated by the coroner of the parish. This official went to the place, still later in the day, to investigate. He first ascertained that the clothesline was in two sections,, and made up his mind that there had been no electrocution, and then, as he says, proceeded to make an autopsy for ascertaining whether the woman had died from an electric shock; for concluding that she had not, he gives as his reason that if she had, her blood would have been red, whereas it was not. He says that [695]*695her heart was small, and its walls thin, and its muscles “not firm and strong, as you usually find in a healthy subject; it was soft and flabby. The woman was in bad condition; she was flabby; her legs were demitis, and her liver enlarged.” Two physicians who were present with him at the autopsy, one of whom had been called by himself, say that the heart was perfectly normal. One of these physicians, the family physician of the plaintiff’s family, and who about a year before the woman’s death had made a thorough examination of her, says that she was a perfectly healthy person; and the evidence shows that she was between 35 and 40 years of age, a healthy woman, strong and active. This physician says that after an electric shock capable of producing death the blood would not continue to be red as long as an hour and a half.

It is safe to say, we think, that if the clothesline had been found by the two officials to be in disconnected sections, they would not have gone to the trouble of an autopsy and a test of the voltage, but rather, if apprehending a suit in damages, would simply have procured witnesses to view the situation, so as to be prepared to establish in court beyond controversy the fact of disconnection, and thereby put a quietus upon all thought of a lawsuit.

Opposed to the testimony of these two officials stands that of plaintiff and of a relative of his, and that of a Mr. Aueoin, an entirely disinterested witness. Mr. Aueoin, who lived on the opposite side of the street, on hearing the screams in plaintiff’s yard, rushed over, and was one of those who helped to carry the body into the house. 1-Ie then went back into the yard, and, hearing it said that the woman had been electrocuted, made an investigation. He saw where the clothesline was in contact with the electric wire, and, following this clothesline, saw that it was a continuous line which wound around the first wooden post for support, and then went on to the second wooden post.

The testimony of these two officials is further contradicted by that of plaintiff and three disinterested witnesses, who say that on touching the wet sheet they received an electric shock. One of these witnesses adds that he warned the bystanders against touching this sheet, as they would receive a shock if they did.

It is suggested' that these witnesses only imagined that they had been shocked. We cannot adopt that supposition as against their positive testimony. Nor does the fact that in their case the shock was innocuous militate against the credibility of their statement. Electricity is known to be freakish in its action, and the woman had been washing clothes in this wet yard, and her hands and shoes were wet, the latter probably saturated.

The same Mr. Aueoin testifies that he noticed that the body was, as he expresses it, “all Gripped up; * * * you might say drawn up.” And this contraction of the muscles of the dead woman is testified to by others. An electric current has the effect of contracting the muscles. Whether this effect endures after the current has ceased we are not advised.

The defendant next urges that, as ascertained by the test that was made, and as known from the invariable mode of operating the light plant, there were but 110 volts in the light wire, and therefore not enough to kill the woman.

There is testimony to the effect that even a lower voltage than this may destroy healthy human life under given conditions; and there is no very satisfactory evidence against that possibility. But we do not see the necessity of going into that question. If the evidence shows that the woman was electrocuted, and, to our minds, it does so show beyond serious dispute, it can make [697]*697no difference whether it was done by means of the usual voltage of 110, or by a higher voltage that may have leaked into the light wire from the power Wire with which it was connected by a converter.

The serious question in the case is whether the defendant is responsible for the lighting wire having come in contact with the clothesline.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 So. 141, 137 La. 691, 1915 La. LEXIS 1739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elias-v-mayor-of-new-iberia-la-1915.