Iowa-Illinois Gas & Electric Co. v. Young

179 F.2d 485, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 2232
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 31, 1950
Docket14000
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 179 F.2d 485 (Iowa-Illinois Gas & Electric Co. v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iowa-Illinois Gas & Electric Co. v. Young, 179 F.2d 485, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 2232 (8th Cir. 1950).

Opinion

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is to reverse a judgment for $11,500 rendered on the verdict of a jury for damages for personal injuries suffered by plaintiff and attributed to negligence of the defendant The plaintiff was a boy of the age of twelve years past at the time of the accident, and in company with five other boys of similar age was climbing about upon the superstructure of a public bridge across the Iowa River in Iowa City, Iowa,' known as the Benton Street bridge, when he slipped and grabbed hold of an adjacent transmission wire strung upon the bridge, charged with a high voltage of electricity, sustaining shock and burns necessitating the amputation of his right arm. The charge of negligence upon which the case was submitted to the jury was:

“That the defendant was careless and negligent in the construction, ownership and maintenance of said transmission lines at the time and place where the plaintiff herein was injured, in failing to exercise ordinary and reasonable care to properly insulate said electric transmission wires and to have said transmission wires so placed that this plaintiff and others might not reasonably come in contact therewith and that the defendants failed to exercise reasonable care and diligence in not knowing or reasonably foreseeing that this plaintiff and others might come in contact with said electric transmission wires in the location and position that said wires were in at the time and place.
“And in determining whether or not the defendant was negligent, you will consider only the negligence charged by the plaintiff in this particular, if it has been proven, and then only such negligence, if any, as was the proximate cause of the injury to the plaintiff.”

It appears that the Benton Street bridge was an old two-span steel structure which had long been closed to the vehicular traffic for which it was intended but was still in use by pedestrians. The Benton Street playgrounds were about a block and a half to the East of it and underneath it there was a sand bar in the river and a “good swimming hole.” On the afternoon of July 12, 1948, five other boys and the plaintiff went swimming near or under the bridge and then began climbing up on its superstructure. The plaintiff followed along after the other boys. A heavy upright member of the bridge truss at its northeást corner afforded easy means of access up to the chord of the truss because strips of metal were attached to it lattice fashion and formed a laddér of a sort from the bridge floor to the point where the chord was joined to the upright. That point was a little less than fifteen feet above the floor of the bridge and the boys readily mounted up to it one after the other and passed on along the top of the chord. The chord was fifteen inches wide on top and all of the boys except the plaintiff proceeded safely over it for considerable distances. The plaintiff followed after the other boys and was crawling on his hands and knees along the top of the chord and was about eight feet beyond the upright member when he got dizzy and started to crawl back. In doing so he slipped and “grabbed hold of” the wire next to him. The wire ran parallel with the chord on which plaintiff was crawling and was set seventeen inches t© the north of it. Although the wire was covered with insulation t®> protect it from the weather, it was *487 not insulated to afford protection to a person corning in contact with it and carried a dangerous voltage (2300 volts) of electricity. The shock rendered the plaintiff unconscious and when his right hand became disengaged from the wire he fell. His fall was broken by brace rods running up to the chord and he was taken off them just above the hand rail of the bridge a few feet above the floor.

The appellant contends for reversal of the judgment that the court erred in denying the motion for directed verdict made by defendant at the conclusion of all the evidence on the ground of (1) insufficiency of the evidence to show negligence of defendant, or (2) that any negligence of defendant was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury, and (3) that plaintiff’s own negligence and voluntary exposure to known danger was conclusively shown to be the proximate cause.

That the wires were maintained and operated by the defendant company was not in dispute but its position in the trial court and on this appeal has been that its wires were strung upon the bridge in strict conformity with proper and approved methods of installation and that it was not guilty of any negligence in so maintaining and operating them. Conceding that the wire was accessible to and was seized by the plaintiff from his position on the chord of the bridge truss, the appellant contends that it was not charged with knowledge or reasonable grounds to anticipate that anyone would come into such a position in relation to its wires. It stresses that it is provided in a booklet of Safety Rules for the Installation and Maintenance of Electric Supply and Communication Lines bearing the imprimatur of the United States Department of Commerce that when wires of the voltage here in question are attached to bridges the minimum clearance to be left between the wires and ordinarily inaccessible portions of the bridge is half a foot and the closest wire here was seventeen inches.

But we think the trial court rightly interpreted and applied the controlling Iowa law in holding that the question -of negligence was for the jury. The numerous photographs of the Benton Street Bridge introduced by both parties show clearly that it did not present the same kind of a picture at the time of the accident as would normally be presented by such a large general traffic bridge within the limits of a city. Though still open to the public, it could attract only a small class. In its state of abandonment from its main intended purposes and its proximity to the children’s playgrounds and to the boys’ swimming hole, it may be said to suggest a different measure of care in the maintenance of high voltage electric wires strung upon it.

It is true defendant was not legally bound to safeguard against occurrences that could not reasonably be expected or contemplated as likely to occur. Cox v. Des Moines Electric Light Co., 209 Iowa 931, 938, 229 N.W. 244. But if defendant or its officers or agents knew or should have known the use which young boys made or were likely to make of this public bridge, then the measure of care taken in placing and maintaining wires on the bridge should have been commensurate with the likelihood of the occurrences of injuries through contact with the wires. It was not necessary that the precise accident which occurred be reasonably foreseeable or that the particular manner of it be contemplated. It is enough if the jury might reasonably find that some injury was likely to follow. The record convinces that here there was sufficient evidence to go to the jury on this question of defendant’s knowledge and for the jury to find that defendant either knew or should have known that young boys were playing and climbing on the bridge. Defendant’s superintendent of electrical distribution, Mr. Frank Shaffer, testified that he had never seen boys climbing on the superstructure of the bridge, but that he had seen boys at different times swimming and playing around the bridge. Mr. Fred Gartcke, city engineer of Iowa City, testified: “Q. Well, do you have any knowledge whether it is from your personal observation or not that they [boys] were or were not climbing on the bridge? A. I have had

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Bluebook (online)
179 F.2d 485, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 2232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-illinois-gas-electric-co-v-young-ca8-1950.