Haywood v. South Hill Manufacturing Co.

128 S.E. 362, 142 Va. 761, 1925 Va. LEXIS 378
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 28, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 128 S.E. 362 (Haywood v. South Hill Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haywood v. South Hill Manufacturing Co., 128 S.E. 362, 142 Va. 761, 1925 Va. LEXIS 378 (Va. 1925).

Opinion

McLemoke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The accident that gave rise to this suit occurred on the outskirts of the city of Portsmouth in a factory section where many of the streets exist only on the plats.

The South Hill Manufacturing Company, hereafter referred to as the box company, has a large manufacturing plant fronting on Douglas avenue and extending [763]*763on both sides of Eighth street which extends through the plant, though physically unmarked. Employees and others use this street at will, but as it is nothing more than a path with no improvements and with nothing to indicate where the sides of the street terminate and private property begins, it could not always be determined whether pedestrians were using the street or were upon private property.

In 1916 the Virginia Railway and Power Company erected for the box company a transformer station somewhere near the line of Eighth street, for the purpose of making available electric current to be furnished by the power company and to be used in the operation of the box company. This station was built upon or very near the ground, and the public protected from any danger that might result from coming in contact with the deadly current of 11,000 volts that passed through it, only by a wire fence constructed around it, the wire used being the ordinary fence wire in common use upon farms. The distance from the fence to the transformer was variously estimated at from the span of the hand to fifteen or eighteen inches.

On the morning of the accident, Cecil Haywood, an infant of eleven years, was passing the transformer, having in his hand a piece of an old saw some fifteen inches in length, which he had picked up in walking along the street or path. With this piece of saw, he thrust his hand and fore arm through the wire fence, bringing some part of the saw in contact with the electrified part of the transformer, from which he received injuries sufficient in the judgment of the jury to justify an award of $3,000.00 against the box company, but as to the Virginia Railway and Power Company, a verdict for the defendant.

This verdict of the jury in so far as it related to the [764]*764box company the court set aside and, under section 6251 of the Code, entered judgment for the defendant, which action of the court, being excepted to, brings the ease before this court for review.

The errors assigned are three in number:

“1st. The court erred in setting aside the verdict and in entering final judgment against the plaintiff.
“2nd. The court erred in allowing in evidence in favor of the Virginia Railway and Power Company, to exempt that company from liability, the contracts between that company and the South Hill Manufacturing Company, Incorporated, marked ‘A’ and ‘B.’
“3rd. The court erred in granting instruction ‘X’.”

The first assignment of error presents for the court’s consideration the major question in the case, namely: Whether or not the defendant box company is liable for injury to the child, Cecil Haywood, under the facts as they must be considered .after a verdict by the jury in his favor.

It is seriously contended by plaintiff’s counsel that the transformer was located in the street, and it may be conceded there is testimony sustaining this view. Whether the testimony of witnesses living in the neighborhood and frequently travelling along this street and passing the transformer almost daily, to the effect that they knew the street lines, and know the structure from which the child received the injury was partly built upon a public street, is to be considered in the face of a survey made by a competent and disinterested engineer, who demonstrates by measurements and a plat that the transformer is three and five-tenths feet north of the street, we do not deem it necessary to decide.

The street in question is an.open unimproved space running through the plant of the box company without marks to indicate its limitations. Pedestrians walked [765]*765along the street or on the adjoining land of the box company with- equal freedom, in fact they did not know whether they were in the street or on private property, as is apparent from the testimony. These conditions were well known to the company, as was the fact that children frequented this locality, and the plaintiff usually traveled this Eighth street in going from his home to the store, and for the delivery of milk to certain families in the neighborhood.

With the physical facts before us, it would seem to be of no great moment whether the transformer was in fact partly on the street, or just north of the street line. The structure was sitting on the ground, protected-by four posts around which was strung ordinary fence wire with meshes about four inches in size. There was no warning or danger signs on this fence, and nothing to indicate to the passer by the fatal results likely to follow contact with the wires leading into the transformers or with parts of the transformer itself which were highly electrified by the reception of 11,000 volts of current.

We think the use of dangerous agencies and instrumentalities either in the street, or so near thereto as to be easily reached by pedestrians passing that way, place upon those responsible for the presence there of the dangerous instrumentalities the duty of giving warnings to and of safeguarding the public by using such mechanical contrivances as will effectually prevent injury to persons or property. Certainly a deadly, hidden force, as in this case, should not be left easily accessible to children whose frequent presence in this vicinity was known to the defendant, and acquiesced in by it, and this without so much as a danger sign anywhere thereabout.

“Reasonable care requires those using dangerous agencies to avail themselves of the best mechanical con[766]*766trivances and inventions in practical use which, are effectual in preventing injury to persons and property.”

The care must be commensurate with the danger.

“Failure to maintain guard wires, insulation and other devices usually employed to prevent danger, is negligence.” Richmond and Petersburg Elec. Ry. Co. v. Rubin, 102 Va. 809, 47 S. E. 834.

“The proper degree of care requires a greater precaution against injury from electric wires when so placed that persons are likely to come in contact therewith, than at more isolated points to which persons are not expected to resort.” 20 Corpus Juris, page 345.

We think the facts in this case place the plaintiff in a stronger position than is presented on behalf of the plaintiff in Lynchburg Tel. Co. v. Booker, 103 Va. 594, 50 S. E. 148. There the dangerous agency was of temporary duration, and only existed at all, because of some accident to the telephone wire. Here the damage arises from contact with a permanent construction for practical purposes unprotected, owned, controlled and operated by the box company, and located as near or nearer the street than was the wire in the Lynchburg Tel. Co. Case.

While it is true, as a general proposition, that the owner of land owes no duty of prevision to trespassers, there are exceptions to the rule as well recognized as the rule itself.

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.E. 362, 142 Va. 761, 1925 Va. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haywood-v-south-hill-manufacturing-co-va-1925.