German American Insurance v. New York Gas & Electric Light, Heat & Power Co.

103 A.D. 310, 93 N.Y.S. 46
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 103 A.D. 310 (German American Insurance v. New York Gas & Electric Light, Heat & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
German American Insurance v. New York Gas & Electric Light, Heat & Power Co., 103 A.D. 310, 93 N.Y.S. 46 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

McLaughlin, J. :

On the 25th of February, 1900, a building in the city of New York, together with personal property therein belonging to certain tenants, was destroyed by fire. The plaintiff and other insurance companies having issued policies to such tenants, idemnifying them against loss or damage, and after the fire having paid such losses, were subrogated to the rights of the tenants. Thereafter the claims of the other insurance companies were assigned to the plaintiff, which brought this action to recover from the defendants the aggregate amount of the loss, on the ground that the destruction of the property covered by the policies of insurance was caused by their negligence in constructing and thereafter maintaining their electric wires upon the building.

The answer denied all of the material allegations tending to show negligence on the part of the defendants.

At the trial there was substantially no dispute as to the destruction by fire of the property referred to in the complaint, or that it was of the value as therein alleged. It, however, was seriously contested that such destruction was caused by the defendants’ negligence, and much evidence was offered by both parties bearing on that subject.

At the conclusion of the trial the case was submitted to the jury with appropriate instructions as to the rights of the respective parties. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the .amount claimed, and from the judgment entered thereon and an order denying a motion for a new trial, defendants have appealed.

I am of the opinion that the learned trial justice did nor err in [312]*312submitting the question of defendants’ liability to the jury, and that the evidence is sufficient to sustain their verdict. From this evidence it appeared that in 1896 the North River Electric Light and Power Company — since succeeded by the defendant the New York Edison Company — for the purpose-of furnishing lights to the tenants, installed a system of electric wires upon the building and has since maintained the same. This system consisted of two primary wires, carrying a current of 1,000 volts, which ran from a pole in front of the building into a transformer fastened thereon, where the current was reduced to a lower voltage. and then distributed throughout the building by means of secondary wires. These secondary wires carried about 50 volts and extended from the transformer to porcelain insulators below it and from there they extended over the outer edge of a metal cornice into the building. The wires, at the time they were installed, were covered with rubber and entirely insulated and were separated from the building by the two-porcelain insulators referred to. The plaintiff contended, and evidence was offered sustaining such contention, that the wires were improperly placed in the first instance, in that they were so constructed that in passing from the insulator to the outer edge of the cornice of the building they came in contact with the metal, whicn permitted a short circuit to be formed, by reason of which it was melted and the wood underneath ignited; that the rubber covering-had worn off and the naked wire came in contact with such cornice with the same result; that this set fire to the building and destroyed the property covered by the insurance policies referred to. If the property were destroyed in this way, then it -would seem that the defendants were properly held liable for the damages sustained.

That the fire was caused by the electric wires I do not think can be seriously questioned. The evidence if not conclusive is at least very satisfactory on this branch of the case. Plaintiff’s witness Lynch, a police officer of the city, testified that while patroling his post a-little after one o’clock in the morning of the day when the fire occurred, he saw a blue flame coming from the wires which extended over the cornice, and rapped for assistance, to which another police officer, Gordon, responded; that he also notified a fireman in 'that vicinity of the fact; that the fireman, one Perry, responded to his call and when he arrived at the scene the flame continued to come [313]*313from the wire and thereafter the wood underneath the cornice became ignited, spreading into the other parts of the building; that on top of the metal cornice and immediately underneath the transformer there was a hole fused through the metal and it was here the wood first caught fire. This witness was corroborated by Officer Gordon, who testified : “ I saw this wire burning; the wire was on the cornice over the doorway of this house; the transformer was right above where the sparks were; I could see- the fire burning into the cornice and I could see the wire on the cornice.” He was also corroborated by the fireman, who testified that he went to the building in response to Lynch’s summons, and when he" got there he went up on a ladder and found a hole in the metal cornice directly under the transformer. To use his own language, he said: “ At that time I saw fire only in the cornice ; there was no fire in any other place in the building as I know of. * * * There was a little fire around the hole in the tin. It was burning inside. This was underneath the big hole.” He was also corroborated by another witness, who testified he was getting off a street car in that locality and saw “ sparks coming from above the doorway of a building there and a sizzling noise and blue flame. * * * There was some fire on the cornice. The fire burned there before it broke out in other places, possibly an hour. * * * The sparks varied. It was raining and snowing and every time the snow would fall, possibly it struck that wire and it sizzled and blue flame came out.”

Much testimony was offered on the part of the defendants that the fire could not have been caused in this way. Notwithstanding that fact, taking the testimony upon both sides, the court could not do otherwise than submit the same to the jury.

It is contended that if it be conceded that the fire was caused by the wires, that this, in and of itself, did not justify a recovery. Assuming, without assenting, that such contention is correct, this naturally leads to the inquiry as to whether the defendants were negligent in constructing or thereafter maintaining the wires. At least five witnesses on the part of the plaintiff, who were familiar with the location of the wires and the transformer, either from occupying offices in the building or from having made an examination of them at the time of the fire, testified that the transformer was only six or seven inches above the cornice; that the insulators were [314]*314below the transformer and so placed that there was at most but a few inches between them and the top of the cornice, even if the wires did not sag'; that the wires did sag and were lying upon the cornice. This was the testimony of the witness Lynch, already referred to, who was corroborated by the witness Long, who had an office in the building. He testified that he could see the wires every day when he looked out of his window; that there were no porcelain knobs or any insulating materials of any kind between the building and the outer edge of the cornice; that he saw the wires several days before the fire lying on the metal, and there was no insulation on them. Substantially to the same effect was the testimony of the witness Horgan, an occupant of the building, who testified that previous to the fire he observed the secondary wires lying on the metal, and the witness Knox also testified that there were no porcelain knobs to prevent the wires from

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 A.D. 310, 93 N.Y.S. 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/german-american-insurance-v-new-york-gas-electric-light-heat-power-nyappdiv-1905.