Howel v. San Joaquin Light & Power Corp.

261 P. 1107, 87 Cal. App. 44, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 35
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 19, 1927
DocketDocket No. 3354.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 261 P. 1107 (Howel v. San Joaquin Light & Power Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howel v. San Joaquin Light & Power Corp., 261 P. 1107, 87 Cal. App. 44, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 35 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

This action is prosecuted by Ruth L. Howell as the surviving widow and Eldon B. Howell as the surviving son of J. B. Howell, deceased, whose death is alleged to have been caused through the negligence of the defendant in maintaining an uninsulated highly charged electric wire in too close proximity to the ground on which the deceased was working at the time he met his death.

*46 The record shows that in May, 1920, the defendant erected a power line in the agricultural section of Tulare County over a certain alfalfa field owned by one S. IT. Cinder. All the premises involved in this section are agricultural .in character and are located about eleven miles southwest of the city of Tulare, in the county of Tulare. The complaint sets forth and the evidence supports the following facts: That prior to the sixth day of November, 1922, the appellant had constructed, and on that day was maintaining a power line, the wires of which were uninsulated, and were carrying approximately 13,000 volts of electricity; that the main line of said company ran along the line of a county road; that the line involved in this action was run from the main power line to a pumping plant over an alfalfa field approximately 200 feet from a certain right-angle turn in the line running from the main line; that at the point where said line turned at right angles, it was supported by a pole which at the time of its construction was held in a perpendicular position and the power line to said pumping plant was held taut and at a fixed distance from the ground by means of a guy-wire extending from the top of the pole to the ground and which said guy-wire was held taut by means of a strut extending from .the said pole to said guy-wire; that prior to the sixth day of November, 1922, the strut had fallen from its place above mentioned, and, in so doing, allowed the pole to be drawn over by the wire, and that the pole on which said wire was suspended, after the falling out of said strut, had leaned over to such an extent that the power line was permitted to sag and come nearer to the ground than originally constructed; that the line in question, at the time of the accident, was only 19 feet and 3 inches from the surface of the ground; that on the first day of May, 1922, the Railroad Commission, by its General Order No. 64, had ordered that all construction, reconstruction, and maintenance of overhead electrical supply and signal lines, including power lines, should have a vertical clearance above the ground along streets, roads, highways, and alleys, in rural districts and across areas capable of agricultural development, of at least 25 feet, where such lines carried an electrical energy of 750 volts, up to and including 17,000 volts. It is further alleged in *47 the complaint that the defendant negligently allowed the strut which supported the pole, to which we have herein referred, in an upright position, to remain out of place and the pole unsupported, and also allowed the supply wire to carelessly and negligently drop lower to the ground than it was when originally constructed. The testimony is to the effect that when originally constructed the wire had a clearance of approximately 23 feet. On the sixth day of November 1922, the deceased, J. B. Howell, who prior to that time had been residing on a dairy ranch about four miles from the premises involved in this action, went to the Cinder place and to the alfalfa field where he met his death, for the purpose of taking up and relaying a certain pipeline to be used in conveying water from a water-tank on the Cinder place to an adjoining pasture upon which the deceased and Cinder had cattle grazing; that the deceased went to work upon said premises at the hour of about 9 o’clock A. M. in taking up and relaying the pipe-line just referred to, and that on the same day, between the hours of 1 and 2 P. M., the deceased took up a section of the pipe-line 20 feet and 6 inches in length immediately beneath the power line herein mentioned; that in taking up the different sections of the pipe-line referred to, the deceased, and the witness Cinder had raised each section perpendicularly, jounced the same up and down upon a board for the purpose of removing all rust or obstruction that might be within the section of the pipe-line being taken up and relaid; that in taking up the 20-foot section just referred to the deceased in some manner raised it up perpendicularly for the purpose of removing the rust therefrom, in the manner just indicated, and by some means the pipe-line was brought in contact with the uninsulated power wire, and electrocution immediately followed. It further appears from the testimony that on the day that the said J. B. Howell was electrocuted, an employee of the defendant, at the request of Mr. Cinder, had gone to the Cinder ranch to replace a burned-out fuse on the transformer situated on a pole near the pumping plant operated on the Cinder premises. This witness testified that he saw Mr. Howell at work and called to him to be careful in the handling of the water-pipe. The testimony does not show *48 that the deceased heard this warning, although the witness testified that at the time Howell ivas distant from him only about 75 feet. On this point there is contradictory testimony, however, as the witness Ginder testified that at the time the employee of the defendant was at work replacing a burned-out fuse on the transformer, Howell was distant some three or four hundred yards. On the part of the defendant it is claimed that the deceased was familiar with the premises. The contrary is maintained by the respondents. The testimony as set forth in the transcript simply shows that the deceased went to the alfalfa field, where he met his death, about 9 o’clock A. M. on November 6, 1922. So far as the record is concerned, there is not a word of testimony showing that the deceased knew anything about the power line, its location; that he had ever seen it, or that he had ever been there preceding the day of his death. The evidence also further shows, without any substantial conflict, that the strut in question which supported the pole where the power line made the right-angle turn, had been out of place for a period of at least two weeks preceding the sixth day of November, and was out of place on the day that the employee of the company was there replacing the burned-out fuse. There is no substantial conflict in the testimony that the wire had also been allowed to droop by reason of the leaning of the pole from its original height of about 23 feet to an elevation above the surface of only 19 feet and 3 inches. Among other witnesses placed upon the witness-stand by the plaintiff was one Carl H. Holley, a consulting engineer, who testified that he had had 23 years’ experience in the construction of electrical power plants and systems; that he had had experience with the Yuba Power Company at Marysville; was construction engineer for the Bay Counties Power Company at Colgate; was superintendent and engineer for the Mount Whitney Power Company and later superintendent and engineer for the Tulare Power Company. This witness testified that power lines over lands or fields capable of agricultural development carrying 11,000 volts of electricity should be at least 25 feet in elevation above the surface, and that a greater distance was desirable. This witness gave the height of the line in question, at the time of his measurement *49 shortly after the accident as 19 feet 2y2

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Bluebook (online)
261 P. 1107, 87 Cal. App. 44, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howel-v-san-joaquin-light-power-corp-calctapp-1927.