Kaw City v. Johnson

1949 OK 157, 209 P.2d 699, 202 Okla. 6, 1949 Okla. LEXIS 391
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 5, 1949
DocketNo. 33356
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1949 OK 157 (Kaw City v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaw City v. Johnson, 1949 OK 157, 209 P.2d 699, 202 Okla. 6, 1949 Okla. LEXIS 391 (Okla. 1949).

Opinion

LUTTRELL, J.

This is an action for damages for wrongful death, brought by W. M. Johnson, administrator of the estate of Milton Oliver Johnson, as plaintiff, against the city of Kaw City, a municipal corporation, defendant. The trial court overruled defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence, overruled defendant’s motion for an instructed verdict at the close of all the evidence, and submitted the cause to a jury, which returned a verdict for plaintiff. Defendant appeals.

[7]*7Essential facts established by the evidence are that the defendant was furnishing light and power to a small town nearby and that in order to do so it maintained two lines or wires carrying 2,300 volts of electricity across a bridge over the Arkansas river. The wires ran from poles on each side of the bridge across the top of the bridge, which crossed the Arkansas river from north to south and was a part of the public highway. The wires of defendant ran across the top of the bridge close to the west side of the bridge, the nearest point of said location to the topmost beam of the westerly superstructure of the bridge being some eighteen inches. The wires were not so insulated as to protect any person who touched them from the high voltage they carried, but were covered with a weatherproofing insulation, which in some places had worn away until the wires were bare. There were no warning signs on the bridge advising the general public that the wires were dangerous. The top of the bridge across which the wires ran was some seventeen feet five inches from the floor of the bridge. The bridge was of steel construction and the outside beams of the superstructure slanted upward for a little way and then ran straight across. These beams were some twelve inches in width. The slanting portion had rivet heads on each side so that an active person could clamber up it and thus get to the top of the bridge.

From the evidence it appears that on July 18, 1945, the deceased, Milton Oliver Johnson, an active and intelligent young man nineteen years of age, attended a picnic or party held on a sandbar near the bridge. The party was attended by numerous young people. When it broke up the deceased and one or two other boys started to climb up the sloping end of the outside beams of the superstructure in order to get to the top of the bridge. Deceased was warned that it was dangerous and was requested by one or two persons not to climb up to the top of the bridge, because he might fall therefrom and be injured. He was also advised that electric wires ran across the bridge. . Notwithstanding these warnings he climbed to the top of the bridge and worked his way toward the center for about ten feet, apparently by straddling the outside beam of the superstructure and pulling himself along. He went up the west beam of the bridge from the north, but after he stopped his progress across the bridge he turned so that he was facing north. After he had made this turn it appears from the uncontroverted evidence that he touched, or attempted to touch, the electrical wires of defendant, in order, as he stated, to dim the lights in Kaw City. From the testimony of several eyewitnesses, some of whom were produced by plaintiff, it appears that he twice touched the wires, causing sparks or flares to be emitted therefrom, without apparent injury to himself. He then touched the wires a third time and was pulled across them by the electric current. He lay across the wires until they broke apart, and he then fell to the floor of the bridge. He died the next morning about 9:30 o’clock. Several of the boys and girls who were present testified that they saw him slap at the wires or put out his hand to touch them, and one witness, who was part way up the bridge on the east side, testified that when he touched them the first time he said “hot”. This so alarmed the witness that he immediately jumped off the superstructure to the floor of the bridge in order to get to a place of safety. He also testified that when the deceased touched the wires a second time he repeated the word “hot”. The deceased had lived in Kaw City until he was sixteen years of age, when his parents removed therefrom to Wyandotte. Deceased was of at least average intelligence, and had graduated from high school in the spring of 1945.

A number of electrical experts testified that the insulation on defendant’s wires was a poor quality; that they should have been laid across the bridge in conduits so as to protect anyone on top of the bridge from danger. Several witnesses testified that they had seen boys climbing around on the bridge [8]*8at various times, and one witness testified that he had advised the superintendent of defendant’s electrical plant that he had seen this, and that there was danger if they came in contact with the wires. This witness testified that the boys he saw were not on top of the bridge, but were climbing around on the superstructure. An undertaker, who went to the scene of the accident with an ambulance and took deceased to Ponca City to the hospital, testified that when he reached the scene of the accident deceased was lying on the bridge; was conscious, and that he called the witness by name and had a conversation with him there on the bridge. Relating the conversation, he testified as follows:

“A. Well, it was very short, he knew me by name — I asked him, I said, Son, what in the world happened? He told me he was up on the bridge and had struck the line to see if it was hot, or see if it was alive and that when he did that the fire flew between him and the wire and the lights dimmed in town, he said he struck it again, the fire flew and the lights dimmed down town; he said the third time he hit it, why, it grabbed him, that is all he ever said.”

Plaintiff’s petition alleged that defendant was negligent by having its wires laid across said bridge without proper insulation; negligent in failing to have warning signs warning the deceased and. others of the presence of wires on the bridge after being notified that children were climbing on the bridge and playing near the wires. Defendant in its answer denied that it was guilty of negligence which resulted in the injury and death of deceased; alleged that the injury and resulting death of deceased were caused wholly through his negligence and want of due care; pleaded contributory negligence, and further alleged that the contact of deceased with the wires was due entirely to his own reckless acts and not through any accidental means.

Defendant makes several contentions for reversal, asserting that deceased was a trespasser to whom it owed no duty except to refrain from wantonly and willfully injuring him, and that therefore it was not negligent; that even if it were negligent, its negligence was not the proximate cause of the injury, but that the injury was due solely to the negligent and wrongful acts of the deceased. Plaintiff urges that the defendant was negligent in maintaining its lines without adequate protection, especially when it had knowledge and warning that children played around and climbed upon said bridge, and that the evidence does not show that the deceased had knowledge of the high voltage carried by said lines.

We are impelled to the conclusion that the deceased in this case occupied the position of a trespasser. This for the reason that he had no business upon the superstructure of the bridge, and was not there by the implied invitation of either the county, the owner of the bridge, or the defendant, which was using the bridge with the consent of the county.

■ In City of Shawnee v. Drake, 69 Okla. 209, 171 P.

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Related

Woodis v. Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co.
1985 OK 62 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1985)
Daniel v. Oklahoma Gas & Electric Company
1958 OK 166 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1958)
City of Shawnee v. Faulkner
1952 OK 21 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1952)
Caraglio v. Frontier Power Co.
192 F.2d 175 (Tenth Circuit, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
1949 OK 157, 209 P.2d 699, 202 Okla. 6, 1949 Okla. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaw-city-v-johnson-okla-1949.