Essick v. City of Lexington

65 S.E.2d 220, 233 N.C. 600, 1951 N.C. LEXIS 370
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 23, 1951
Docket672
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 65 S.E.2d 220 (Essick v. City of Lexington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Essick v. City of Lexington, 65 S.E.2d 220, 233 N.C. 600, 1951 N.C. LEXIS 370 (N.C. 1951).

Opinion

DeviN, J.

The only assignment of error brought forward by the defendants City of Lexington and Lexington Utility Commission was the denial of their motion for judgment of nonsuit.

It was not controverted that the City of Lexington in its corporate capacity owned and operated electric light and power lines, and that the Utility Commission was an incorporated agency of the City charged with supervision and management thereof. The plaintiff’s intestate was a carpenter, in the employ of the Dixie Furniture Company and was engaged at the time of his injury in putting a metal cap on the top of the roof over an elevated tramway constructed by the Dixie Furniture Company, with the permission of the City, over a city street. The defendants had changed and relocated wires conveying 2,300 volts of electricity over this street and tramway in such way that uninsulated power wires were left only about four feet above the roof of the tramway. It was in evidence that while plaintiff’s intestate was on the roof of the tramway handling strips of metal for capping one of these strips came in contact with the electric wire overhead and plaintiff’s intestate was electrocuted.

The plaintiff’s evidence, tending to show the improper placing of wires carrying so powerful an electric current at less than the height prescribed by the North Carolina Building Code regulations (G.S. 143-136) above construction work then being carried on with the knowledge and permission of the defendants, and that it could reasonably have been foreseen that those engaged in this work, who were unwarned that the uninsulated wires carried a dangerously powerful current, were likely to come in contact therewith, when considered in the light most favorable for the plaintiff, was sufficient to justify the imputation of negligence proximately causing the injury and death complained of. But defendants present the view also that the evidence offered by plaintiff makes out a conclusive case of contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff’s intestate, and that their motion for judgment of nonsuit should have been sustained on that ground. However, it appears that plaintiff’s intestate was a carpenter presumably unfamiliar with electric wiring and electric current, and was without knowledge or warning that the wires carried so powerful a current of electricity, or that wires placed so close to work then being carried on with the knowledge of the defendants were uninsulated. With *604 out undertaking to state tbe evidence at length, we reach the conclusion that it does not establish as a matter of law that plaintiff’s intestate was guilty of such contributory negligence as would bar recovery. The rule is that a judgment of nonsuit on this ground can be rendered only when but one reasonable inference leading to that conclusion can be drawn from the evidence. Hampton v. Hawkins, 219 N.C. 205, 13 S.E. 2d 227; Daughtry v. Cline, 224 N.C. 381, 30 S.E. 2d 322; Barlow v. Bus Lines, 229 N.C. 382, 49 S.E. 2d 793. Nor do we think the evidence was such as to justify nonsuit on the ground that negligence on the part of the plaintiff’s intestate’s employer Dixie Furniture Company was either the sole proximate cause of the injury or that it insulated the negligence of the defendants.

The case was properly submitted to the jury.

On the appeal of defendants City of Lexington and Lexington Utilities Commission there is

No error.

Appeal of Dixie Furniture Company and Travelers Insurance Company.

The Dixie Furniture Company and the Travelers Insurance Company, though not parties to the action, noted exception to the judgment and to the submission of the 3rd issue, and have brought their appeal to this Court.

The defendants City of Lexington and Lexington Utility Commission contend that these appellants have no standing in court, as they were not parties to the action; that the Dixie Furniture Company was dismissed as additional party defendant upon objection by plaintiff and Dixie Furniture Company, and did not participate in the trial, and hence should not now be heard to except to the rulings of the trial judge or to issues which were submitted without objection.

This position would seem to be in accord with appropriate appellate procedure, but we will nevertheless consider the two points raised: (1) That the judge in his charge to the jury on the 1st issue submitted to the jury, in connection therewith, the question of intervening negligence on the part of the Dixie Furniture Company, and that the answer to that issue should have been held determinative of the 3rd issue. This position cannot be upheld as the finding that negligence on the part of Dixie Furniture Company did not insulate and render harmless the negligence of the City of Lexington and its Utility Commission is not necessarily inconsistent with finding also that Dixie Furniture Company was negligent, and that its negligence contributed to the injury complained of.

Plaintiff’s allegation of negligence on the part of the City and its Utility Commission, in substance, was that these defendants had negli *605 gently, placed and continued to maintain higb tension uninsulated electric wires carrying a powerful current along á city street and immediately over an elevated tramway which they knew had been planned and was being constructed, and in such close proximity to the structure that in the exercise of due care it could have been foreseen that those engaged in this construction would likely come in contact with these power wires to their injury, and that this negligent placing of the wires was done and allowed to remain without warning of the dangerous nature of the current to those engaged in this construction.

The answer of the defendants City of Lexington and Lexington Utility Commission alleged negligence on the part of the Dixie Furniture Company in that it directed plaintiff’s intestate to work in close proximity to these high tension electric wires without instruction or warning as to the dangerous nature of the electric current being carried by these wires. As a defense to the plaintiff’s action it was alleged that this negligence on the part of the Dixie Furniture Company was primary, or was the sole proximate cause of the intestate’s death, or that it was a new and intervening cause which insulated and rendered ineffective and harmless any negligence on the part of the defendants.

Upon the evidence offered in support of these allegations the jury’s answer to the 1st issue apparently negatived each of these three defenses, but it did not necessarily acquit the Dixie Furniture Company of fault or decide that its negligence was not in some degree a contributing cause of Essick’s death. The finding on the 1st issue disposed of the defendants’ defense that the negligence of Dixie Furniture Company in the respects alleged in the answer was a new and intervening cause breaking the chain of causation and interrupting the sequence between the defendants’ negligence and the injury complained of, but it did not thereby absolve the Dixie Furniture Company entirely of the imputation of negligence constituting a contributing cause of the injury.

Insulating negligence as that term is defined and applied in Ballinger v. Thomas, 195 N.C. 517, 142 S.E. 761; Butner v. Spease, 217 N.C. 82, 6 S.E. 2d 808; Shaw v. Barnard,

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.E.2d 220, 233 N.C. 600, 1951 N.C. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/essick-v-city-of-lexington-nc-1951.