Forrey, Jr., Receiver v. Turpin, Exrx.

20 N.E.2d 212, 106 Ind. App. 681, 1939 Ind. App. LEXIS 109
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 11, 1939
DocketNo. 16,028.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 N.E.2d 212 (Forrey, Jr., Receiver v. Turpin, Exrx.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forrey, Jr., Receiver v. Turpin, Exrx., 20 N.E.2d 212, 106 Ind. App. 681, 1939 Ind. App. LEXIS 109 (Ind. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Curtis, C. J.

This was an action by Georgia Turpin, who is executrix of the last will of W. Smith Turpin, her deceased husband, against George C. Forrey, Jr., as receiver of Indianapolis Street Railway Company, for damages occasioned by the alleged wrongful death of her said decedent. She brings the action in her capacity as the personal representative of her deceased husband and in her behalf as the widow of - said decedent.

The decedent was f oreman of the Senate Avenue plant of the Indianapolis Glove Company and was killed by an electric shock while on the roof of the factory building trying to construct an aerial for his radio. Senate Avenue is a public street running north and south in the city of Indianapolis, and the building on which the decedent stood is on the east side of the street and faces west. There was an open alley along the north side of the building. The decedent met his death by throwing his aerial wire up and out over a high voltage electric wire on *683 Senate Avenue, which high voltage wire was slightly more than six feet west of. the west wall of the building and about six feet higher than the roof on which he stood. There was a clear space of something over six feet between the high voltage wire and the front wall of the building.

There was a fire wall, or parapet, along the front, or west side of the building, which some of the testimony showed to be 39 inches high, measuring from the roof. A transmission line ran on and along the street in front of.the building, the poles being set next to. the east curb at the street pavement. There was a sidewalk between the east curb and the front of the building. The poles carried cross arms, and there were six high tension wires attached to three cross arms, thus placing three wires on each side of the pole. One of these wires belonged to the appellant. This wire carried 33,000 volts of electricity. The three wires on the side next to the building were six and one-half feet distant from the perpendicular front wall of the building; the others were on the opposite ends of the cross arms and were substantially farther away. The topmost pair of these wires was about three feet, or slightly less, higher up than the top of the parapet wall, or on a plane about six feet higher than the roof. These wires were in plain view from the roof of the building.

At the time of his injury, Mr. Turpin was attempting to install a radio in his office on the first floor of the building, and had gone to the roof for the purpose of constructing an aerial. He took some wire which he attached to the main aerial on the roof and then intended to let it down alongside the front of the building so as to make the connection with the radio in a front room in the building. Along the foot of the parapet was a metal flashing, constructed to prevent water from seep *684 ing down the wall, and Mr. Turpin stood with one foot on this flashing. With the apparent intention of casting the small wire over the parapet wall so that it would drop down along the front of the building, he tossed it out in such a manner as that it came in contact with the appellant’s wire, which was the topmost high tension wire.

The instant the circuit was established, Mr. Turpin was killed. The wire he had thrown was burned in two, the current passed through the foot resting on the metal flashing, burning a hole in the sole of his shoe.

The high tension wire was not enclosed by any insulating material, nor were the cross arms supporting it painted in any distinguishing color.

The appellee contends in the first two paragraphs of complaint that the maintenance of the uninsulated high tension wire within said distance of the building constituted negligence and was the proximate cause-of decedent’s death; and in the third paragraph of complaint it is contended that failure to insulate the wire and the failure to paint the cross arms with a distinguishing color was negligence and caused the death.

The appellant claims freedom from negligence on its part, and that the decedent’s death was caused by his own contributory negligence.

The jury found for the appellee and awarded her damages in the sum of $5,000. The judgment was in accordance with the verdict of the jury. This appeal involves the sufficiency of the several paragraphs of the complaint ; the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict ; whether the verdict is contrary to law; also whether there was error in giving of each of certain instructions and in refusing to give each of certain instructions tendered by the appellant.

The cause was submitted for trial on the second *685 amended complaint in three paragraphs which appellant, after demurrers to each were overruled, answered by general denial. The appellant’s demurrers to each paragraph of the complaint were for want of sufficient facts, also for want of appellee’s capacity to sue in her capacity as executrix.

Each of the paragraphs pleads the physical surroundings in that each alleges that the Indianapolis Street Railway Company, as a part of its system, maintained an uninsulated open wire or cable for the transmission of electric current, which wire was supported by a line of poles set a short distance east of the east curbline of North Senate Avenue, in the city of Indianapolis; that the wire carried a current of more than 15,000 volts. The Indianapolis Glove Company’s factory was located at 1315 N. Senate Avenue; it was a three'story brick building with a frontage of about 65 feet on Senate Avenue, and extended back, toward the east, about 100 feet.

The first and second paragraphs charge negligence in the maintenance, on July 1, 1931, of said open, overhead wire along and over the east side of North Senate Avenue at a distance horizontally from the building of approximately six feet, “well knowing that said wire carried and was the conductor of a dangerous and deadly current of electricity of much more than 15,000 volts between conductors, and well knowing the fact that the maintenance of said wire carrying the said high voltage of electricity at a distance of but six feet horizontally from said building was exceedingly dangerous to the occupants and employees in or about said building, and to all persons who had occasion or reason to go upon the roof of said building, and well knowing that persons who had occasion to be upon the roof of said building, and approach the west wall thereof were placed in dangerous proximity to said wire . . . which defendant at the time knew was *686 wholly without insulation, guard or protection of any kind.”

The said first and second paragraphs each alleges that on July 1, 1931, appellee’s decedent, W.

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.E.2d 212, 106 Ind. App. 681, 1939 Ind. App. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forrey-jr-receiver-v-turpin-exrx-indctapp-1939.