Gordon v. . Ashley

83 N.E. 686, 191 N.Y. 186, 29 Bedell 186, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 1047
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 18, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 83 N.E. 686 (Gordon v. . Ashley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. . Ashley, 83 N.E. 686, 191 N.Y. 186, 29 Bedell 186, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 1047 (N.Y. 1908).

Opinion

Vann, J.

The primary question in this case is who owned and maintained the electric wire that caused the death of the plaintiffs’ intestate? The leading facts, as the jury might *189 have found them, are as follows: On the 3d of February, 1898, the defendant entered into a written contract with the village of Whitehall whereby he agreed to erect a plant and light its streets and public buildings with electricity for the term of five years from the first of May following. The village gave him a franchise during the existence of the contract “to erect and maintain poles, string wires and to furnish electric lights and electric appliances for lighting and power in all the streets,” etc. All wires strung or used for the purpose were to be “ properly insulated, so as to afford the best and safest protection to life and property.” The defendant agreed to save the village harmless from all actions and damages caused by the negligence of himself or his agents and to furnish a bond for the faithful performance of the entire contract. There was also a covenant, substantially in the form required by the statute prohibiting the assignment and subletting of public contracts, “ that the right and franchise of and for said electric lighting and any and all rights conferred by this contract are not to be sublet, sold or assigned,” by the defendant “ without the consent of the board of trustees * * * indicated by a resolution,” etc. (L. 1897, cli. 444, sec. 1.)

Pursuant to this contract and prior to April 30, 1898, the defendant leased a power house, placed the requisite machinery therein, installed an electric line through the streets of the village and on that day began to furnish electric service. One of the wires was strung across the Champlain canal and a public highway on the bank thereof, upon poles 160 feet apart. It was not properly stayed so as to prevent vibration and contact with one of the guy wires of a telephone plant. The friction between the two wires when the wind blew had impaired the insulation and weakened the electric wire. The defect in the insulation was increased by dampness. The plaintiffs’ intestate was a locktender, and while on duty in a public place during the night of October 11th, 1898, when the wind was blowing and there was some rain, the wire parted and fell upon him, causing instant death. The wire was of *190 ordinary size, while the span at the point in question was of unusual length. When the wind blew the wire swayed and came in contact with the guy wire, forming an arc, which melted the electric light wire and caused it to fall. It carried a current of 2,200 volts of electricity, which was enough to cause death if it touched a human being. This condition had existed so long that those who maintained the electric wire knew or should have known of the imminent danger.

While thé jurors were not bound to find these facts they could have found them as thus stated, and without reciting all the evidence bearing upon the negligent maintenance of the electric wire and the freedom of the decedent from contributory negligence, we think a case was made for tlie jury upon these questions.

The defendant, however, denied that he owned the wire when it fell upon the decedent, and testified -that some time before he had sold his entire plant to a corporation, organized and controlled by himself, known as the Kane’s Falls Electric Company. The certificate incorporating that company was filed on the 14th of June, 1898, the defendant, his wife and one West being the incorporators, trustees and the only stockholders. The defendant, who owned substantially all the stock, was elected president and Mr. West secretary and treasurer. This was about four months before theaccideht. More than two months after the accident the defendant, by a wilting under his hand and seal, transferred to said corporation his “ contract and franchise for the lighting of the streets and public buildings of the village of Whitehall with electricity, and all the benefits, rights and privileges to be derived therefrom',” and the trustees of the village, by resolution, consented to such transfer, released the defendant from his bond and accepted the bond of the assignee in place thereof.

The defendant testified that in June, 1898, a resolution was adopted by the trustees of the Kane’s Falls Electric Company to purchase from liim “ the property, leases and contracts ” that he had in Whitehall, in consideration of “ $24,000 worth ” of its stock and that he at once transferred the same to the *191 company by an instrument in writing. Neither the minute book of the company nor that assignment was produced, as the defendant testified that they had been destroyed by fire, although the assignment of December, 1898, usually kept in the same place, was not destroyed. The defendant also testified that the June assignment was delivered at the time the resolution to purchase was adopted by the trustees, and that aside from himself, Mrs. Ashley and Mr. West were the only persons present; Mrs. Ashley was not called as a witness, and Mr. West said that he thought such a resolution was passed, but he had no recollection of the assignment from the defendant. At a later stage in his testimony he was certain that the resolution was passed, but still he could not remem. ber any assignment. Mr. West was manager both for the defendant and the company.

The defendant was a lawyer and a man of large affairs. He was extensively engaged in business, interested in six power and electric companies and the president of at least two. His memory was not always reliable. On the first trial he said that the transfer of J une, 1898, was by a resolution to purchase and that he was not sure that there was any other, although he thought there was, “ but not of the lease,” while on the trial under consideration, his recollection, refreshed as he‘said by reflection and by questions put to him, was clear that there was a written transfer^ which included the lease signed by himself, and he stated the form and contents thereof in detail. He was not certain when the fire occurred that destroyed the minute book and the first assignment, stating at first that it was “about a year or two after this incorporation, somewhere about 1900,” and later that “ it was 1898, or 1899, or 1899 and 1900.” On the first trial he said that “it was January 13tli, 1900.” The first assignment was not presented to the village trustees in December, 1898, Avhen they consented to a transfer of the franchise, because, as the defendant explained, the original paper “ embodied a transfer of the property and the lease * * * and was not a thing that the board of trustees had any interest in.” He also *192 attempted to account for the failure to produce the first assignment before the trustees by saying that the corporation was about to transfer the lighting property to Bertron & Storrs, but when the assignment to that firm, dated November 20th, 1900, was shown him and he was asked, “You take that back ? ” he answered, “ Yes, sir,” and thus his testimony closed. The assignment to Bertron & Storrs executed by him as president of the Kane’s Falls Electric Company recited the assignment to that company of December, 1898, but made no mention of any previous assignment. The second assignment, made after the accident, was the only one presented to the trustees of the village.

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.E. 686, 191 N.Y. 186, 29 Bedell 186, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 1047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-ashley-ny-1908.