Jackson v. Deming Ice & Electric Co.

189 P. 654, 26 N.M. 3
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1919
DocketNo. 2315
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 189 P. 654 (Jackson v. Deming Ice & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. Deming Ice & Electric Co., 189 P. 654, 26 N.M. 3 (N.M. 1919).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT.

PARKER, C. J.

Tbe appellant on September 20, 1917, was a public service corporation engaged in supplying the inhabitants of Deming and the surrounding country with electric energy for lighting and power. On the date mentioned a part of its equipment consisted of a line of poles and wires running east and west on Birch street. This line consisted of two wires carrying a voltage of approximately 2,300 volts. Granite street intersected Birch street, and appellee resided in a house owned by a Mrs. Bishop which fronted on Granite street; the lot on which it stood extending 150 feet deep on Birch street. The lot was inclosed with a fence, having a front entrance, and also an entrance about 60 feet from the front on Birch street. Thé rear part of the lot was inclosed with a board fence about 5 feet high. In the northwest corner of the inclosure, at the rear of the lot, there was a small frame garage.

On the date mentioned the house was occupied by Harry H. Archuleta, his wife, and small child, and by one Kelly, and the garage was occupied by Mrs. Bishop, owner of the premises, and her three small children. About 10 o’clock at night on the 20th of September, 1917, the electric light pole at the corner of the alley, with the transformer, fell on the garage. In falling, the transformer was broken loose from the pole, and fell in front of the garage entrance, inside of - the inclosure. Mrs. Bishop and her children were in bed in the garage, and upon the pole falling were very much alarmed. ' She opened the door of the garage and screamed, and Mr. and Mrs. Archuleta and Kelly came to the back door, being on a screened porch at the rear of the house. At this time the service wires extending from the pole to the house were down and clearly visible by reason of the electric light, which was burning at a pole situated at the southwest corner of Granite and Birch streets and distant from the Archuleta house some 30 feet or more. Mr. Kelly came to the assistance of Mrs. Bishop, and Mr. Archuleta went to a neighbor’s house, distant approximately from Archuleta’s back door 100 feet or more. The occupants of this house had been awakened by the crash of the falling, pole and the outcries of- Mrs. Bishop. Archuleta went to the telephone in this house— Mr. Kerr’s — and telephoned to the office .of, appellant, stating th¡a¡t a pole, had fallen down and fallen on a house, that he was afraid the house would be set afire and some one hurt, and that they had better shut off the current. After telephoning, Archuleta talked with Mr. Kerr a few moments, and then left Kerr’s house. Upon reaching the sidewalk along Granite street he met a soldier, and he and the soldier proceeded north along the sidewalk to the front gate of Archuleta’s house. Here Archuleta left the soldier and went into his yard, passed around the house and to the gate situated on the south line of Birch street, and close to the intersection of the high board fence and the lower or front fence. He started to go through the gate, but for some unknown reason turned about and came back to his own front gate, and there rejoined the soldier. He and the soldier then proceeded north along the remaining part of Archuleta’s premises and to the corner of Birch street. Here they passed some little distance into the street, and then proceeded west down Birch street to a point beyond the aforesaid north gate of the Archuleta premises. Here they encountered the service wires running from the fallen pole or transformer across' Birch street to the rear of the Nesh house, whereupon they turned about and came toward the Archuleta side gate, Archuleta in advance some 4 feet of the soldier. The soldier saw the wires which were down, but not on the ground, and called out to Archuleta and reached for him to stop his progress; but notwithstanding the cry Archuleta advanced the very short distance that existed between him and the wire, came in contact with the wire, and was immediately killed. The time that had expired from the falling of the pole up to the time of Archuleta’s death was approximately 10 minutes. Immediately after Mr. Arch-uleta’s death, Mr. Kerr telephoned the office of appellant and the power was shut off.

When Mr. Archuleta telephoned the office of appellant, he spoke to one Dial, who was employed as a stenographer by the appellant. Mr. Archuleta did not give his name in telephoning and was not asked his name by Mr. Dial, and according to the testimony by Mr. Dial stated incorrectly the whereabouts of the fallen pole, giving the wrong block; he giving block 400, instead of block 600. Mr. Dial made no inquiry of Mr. Archuleta after being informed that the pole and wires were down, and that some one might be hurt. Immediately upon receipt of the message, Mr. Dial attempted to call Mr. Cttmmings, the superintendent of appellant. He could not get in communication with Mr. Cummings, however, by telephone, and got into an automobile and went to the Cummings house, and there found that Mr. Cummings had already gone to the scene of the accident. Mr. Shepherd was the manager of the appellant. He had left the office of the company apparently only a minute or two prior to the telephone message of Archu-leta and had gone home. There was considerable evidence introduced upon the trial as to the rotten condition of the pole; but this phase of the case, in view of our conclusion, needs no consideration.

It was alleged in the complaint that it was the duty of the appellant to exercise reasonable care to see that its poles, lines, and wires did not, by reason of dilapidation, decay, or otherwise, become dangerous to persons traveling along or being in the public streets, and that it was ihe duty of the appellant, upon being warned and advised that any part of its system of poles and wires had fallen and were lying in such condition as to be dangerous to travelers in the public streets, to immediately shut off the current and that the appellant negligently failed to maintain its poles, lines, and wires in a reasonably safe condition, and negligently allowed the pole on Birch street and the alley to become decayed and rotten, by reason whereof the pole fell, and plaintiff's deceased came to his death, and that the appellant negligently failed, after being -warned and advised of the fall of the pole and wires, to shut off the current, and that by reason of all of said negligence, to wit, the permitting of the pole to become decayed and its failure to shut off the current, plaintiff’s intestate was killed. In its answer the appellant denied any and all negligence on its part, and set up the plea of contributory negligence, in that plaintiff’s intestate, having knowledge of the fact that the poles had fallen and carried wires with them charged with electricity, and that said wires were down, did carelessly come into contact with said wires, when he might, by the exercise of ordinary care and prudence, have avoided coming into contact therewith.

There was evidence showing or tending to show that appellee’s intestate had no particular knowledge of electricity; that he had never made an examination of the premises with reference to the location of the electric light poles or wires; that he had lived in Deming.but two or three weeks; that he had lived in the house in question but two days; that great excitement and confusion prevailed between the time of the alarm and the time of the accident, and that Mrs. Bishop and Mrs. Archuleta were both screaming, and children screaming, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
189 P. 654, 26 N.M. 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-deming-ice-electric-co-nm-1919.