Hohimer v. City Light & Traction Co.

262 S.W. 403, 218 Mo. App. 138, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 146
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 26, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 262 S.W. 403 (Hohimer v. City Light & Traction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hohimer v. City Light & Traction Co., 262 S.W. 403, 218 Mo. App. 138, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 146 (Mo. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, P. J.

Plaintiff’s action is for damages resulting from an electric shock received through defendant’s alleged negligence. Defendant owns and operates the electric light and power plant in Sedalia. Verdict and judgment for $2000 being obtained, the defendant has appealed.

Engineer street, running north and south, intersects Third street running east and west. For about twelve or fifteen years prior to the injury, defendant had maintained, along the east side of Engineer street, three parallel high voltage wires attached to cross-arms fastened, twenty-five feet above the ground, on poles set just inside the curb or outer edge of the sidewalk, one of said poles being at the northeast corner of said street intersection. The Southwestern Bell Telephone Company maintained a line of telephone wires along the west side of Engineer street, likewise fastened to cross-arms on poles similarly set in the sidewalk on that side of the *140 street, one of said poles being near the northwest corner of said street intersection but slightly northwest of the aforesaid electric light pole on the opposite corner. The Telephone Company also had a line of telephone wires running east and west along the north side of Third street, likewise attached to cross-arms on poles similarly set just inside the curb or outer edge of the sidewalk on that side of said street. The telephone wires along the west side of Engineer street were somewhat higher than the electric wires on the opposite or east side of the street, though the record does not disclose how much higher; and the telephone wires along the north side of Third street were somewhat lower than the aforesaid electric wires, though how much lower they were is not disclosed.

Some eighteen months prior to the injury, the telephone company braced the telephone pole near the northwest corner of said street intersection by running a “brace wire” therefrom, above and across the electric wires, to a “stub or brace” post, located 120 to 200 feet distant and which was set in line with the poles supporting the east and west telephone lines along the north side of Third street. Said stub post was only a few feet beyond the second telephone pole east of said street intersection, the first one being at or near the northwest corner of said street intersection.

From the top of defendant’s electric pole at the northeast corner of said street intersection, the defendant had run its brace wire to the telephone company’s said stub or brace post and attached it thereto at or very close to the point where the telephone company’s above-mentioned brace was fastened. A few feet out from defendant’s said electric pole there was, on defendant’s brace wire, a “pull ball” insulator to break the electrical communication between said electric pole and the stub post and stop any current which might perchance get on said brace wire belonging to defendant.

*141 From the upper part of the stub post, near the point where the telephone company’s brace wire was fastened, the telephone company had a guy wire which, sloping east, ran down to the ground and was fastened to a “dead man” therein, set in line with the telephone poles on that side of Third street. At some point on this sloping guy wire, not clearly shown in the record but apparently high enough up to be beyond ordinary human reach, there was a “pull ball” insulator placed there by the telephone company as a break in any electrical connection between the top of said guy wire and the ground.

From the top of the above-mentioned second telephone pole, located a few feet west of the stub post, a guy wire ran down and was fastened to the stub post near the ground.

One of the telephone wires running east and west along the north side of Third street had broken and fallen to the ground but remained fastened to and suspended from the aforesaid second telephone pole near the stub post. We have searched the abstract of the record carefully to discover any showing as to where this break occurred, but found none. In its briefs and also in the oral argument defendant seems to have assumed that this break occurred between the first and the ■second poles, i. e., at some point west of the pole from which it hung suspended. , However, both at the trial and in the oral argument before us, the defendant’s huge model of the various wires and poles, concededly showing a correct representation of the entire situation at the scene in question, was used; and said model unquestionably shows that the wire broke somewhere between the second and third poles, that is, east of the second pole and presumably near the third pole. The difference in the location of the break apparently is this: The loose wire, when the injury occurred, was hanging from the second telephone pole and lay to the east past the stub post and across the guy wire running from the stub to the “dead man.” Consequently, if the *142 break occurred between the second and third poles the wire would naturally fall down and pass close to the stub post and perhaps across its guy wire running to the “dead man,” whereas, if the wire broke between the first and second poles, or west of the latter, it would lie in that direction, and before it could get in the position it apparently was in at the time of the injury, it would have had to be carried in some way around to the east and past the stub post and thrown over the guy wire running therefrom to the “dead man.” However, even if it should be conceded that the wire broke between the first and third poles, we do not think the disposition to be made of the case would be materially affected owing to the fact that this swinging loose wire could easily get to the east even if the break occurred west of the pole from which it remained suspended.

Plaintiff’s house and front yard, on the north side of Third street, fronted south thereon and was located a short distance east of the street intersection but close to the stub post and guy wire therefrom fastened to the “dead man.” Opposite to, or north -of this “dead man” was a tree located in the yard and a few feet back from the sidewalk.

Prior to the day of the injury, which was on the 24th of June, 1923, the broken telephone wire, either in falling (if the,break occurred east of the second pole), or (if the break occurred, as defendant assumes, west of said pole), had, in some way, gotten around to the other side of said telephone pole, and was across the sloping guy wire leading from the stub post to the ‘ ‘ dead man.” The evidence shows that a neighbor had seen the wire and some children playing with it, and he had wrapped said wire around the tree hereinabove mentioned. The evidence also is that plaintiff herself, in passing, had seen the wire and had attempted to wrap it around a post “right at the side.” Whether this was the telephone pole or the stub post may not be clear, but presumably she meant the stub post.

*143 On the day of the injury, a family, living immediately adjoining plaintiff on the west, being compelled to be away from home, left their little boy James, eight years old, in plaintiff’s care; and he and his brother, in company with plaintiff’s little boy, were playing in the front yard and on the sidewalk.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Thornton v. Union Electric Light & Power Co.
72 S.W.2d 161 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1934)
Klaber v. Kansas City, Missouri
17 S.W.2d 621 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1929)
Hogan v. Fleming
297 S.W. 404 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1927)
Kessler v. West Missouri Power Co.
283 S.W. 705 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 S.W. 403, 218 Mo. App. 138, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hohimer-v-city-light-traction-co-moctapp-1924.