Kurdziel v. Van Es

306 P.2d 159, 180 Kan. 627, 1957 Kan. LEXIS 251
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 12, 1957
Docket40,365
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 306 P.2d 159 (Kurdziel v. Van Es) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kurdziel v. Van Es, 306 P.2d 159, 180 Kan. 627, 1957 Kan. LEXIS 251 (kan 1957).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wertz, J.:

This was an action for damages for wrongful death (G. S. 1949, 60-3203), brought by plaintiffs (appellees) Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kurdziel, parents and next of kin of their deceased minor son Frank B. Kurdziel, Jr., aged three years, against defendants (appellants) Peter A. Van Es, d/b/a Van Es Electrical Construction Company, and Joe Gildersleeve. From a judgment in plaintiff’s favor defendants appeal.

The petition, so far as material herein, alleged that defendant Van Es was doing business as an electrical construction company, and Gildersleeve was his agent and employee; that defendants installed in the premises, later occupied by plaintiffs, a switch box and connection and outlet for a clothes dryer; that they negligently performed the work in a manner as to permit the outer metal shell and metal trimmed table top which was in the kitchen to become charged with electricity to the extent of 115 volts. Plaintiffs alleged defendants were guilty of the following specific acts of negligence: (1) By installing four No. 10 insulated wires in a & inch Romex connector in direct violation of the National Electrical Code and *628 the Electrical Code of the City of Topeka; (2) by installing four No. 10 insulated wires within a cable connector which was too small to hold the wires when they knew damage would be done to the insulation upon the wire, thereby charging the surrounding metal objects with electricity and making the electrical installation unsafe; (3) by the failure to properly provide and install a grounding system to the dryer outlet installation, and particularly the two pole 30 amp disconnector switch when they knew that the electrical system which was improperly grounded was a dangerous instrumentality, and (4) in failing to warn or notify the occupants of the premises of the negligent manner in which the installation was made. It was further alleged that on July 14, 1954, plaintiffs’ infant son, aged three, came in contact with a flat-topped object which had been charged with electricity as a result of the negligence of defendants, resulting in their son’s death; that plaintiffs expended $600 for funeral expenses, and that they suffered mental anguish, bereavement, loss of society and companionship of their son, severe and excruciating pain, and asked to recover $15,000.

Defendant Van Es filed his answer containing a general denial and further stated that Gildersleeve was his employee acting in the furtherance of his business, and that on February 11, 1953, Gilder-sleeve went to the premises and installed a switch box to be used in connection with a clothes dryer, and that the box was installed in a good workmanlike manner and in full compliance with the National and City Electrical Codes, and if the switch box became defective it was through no fault of the defendant or his employee, but the negligence of some other person unknown to defendant. The answer further alleged that plaintiffs knew or could have known of the defective condition of the premises prior to the time of the death of their son, and that they made no effort to report or correct the same, or to guard their son or other persons coming in contact with the defective condition, and that they were guilty of contributory negligence in permitting the defective condition of the premises to remain, and in permitting their child.to climb on the cabinet in the kitchen where he was injured. Gildersleeve’s answer was to the same effect.

Plaintiffs filed a general denial to the mentioned answer, and their evidence in support of allegations contained in their petition may be briefly summarized as follows: On February 11, 1953, defendants went to the premises then occupied by Major Howard and *629 his family, later occupied by plaintiffs, and installed an electric switch box in the kitchen on the west wall about ten inches over the bread board, or serving surface which was on either side of.the sink, and an outlet for a clothes dryer. About July 1,1953, Plaintiffs and their infant son moved into the premises and occupied them continuously until the death of their son, July 14, 1954. At 10 a. m. on that date, the mother and son were playing together in the living room. She left the child for approximately three minutes while attending to another child. She returned and went into the kitchen and found the deceased child sitting oh his knees on the work bench of the cabinet with his right shoulder against the switch box that defendants had installed, and his feet and legs rested on the metal strip which went around the outside edge of the work bench. The child had been electrocuted. The city electrical inspector was called to the premises, having examined the installations made by defendants, and found they had been negligently installed in violation of the electrical code and were defective in three particulars as follows: (1) Four No. 10 wires had been installed into a & inch instead of a I inch Romex cable connector, in violation of the national and city codes; (2) Four No. 10 installation- wires had been installed into a hole which was too small to hold the wires, and (3) a metal box had been installed upside down on the wall and had not been grounded. The electrical inspector further testified that the records of his office failed to disclose a request for inspection and a permit for the installation. Tests showed that if a person touched the box on which the child’s right shoulder was leaning when found, and the metal strip on which his feet and legs were touching, it would complete a circuit by grounding the box which was termed “hot”, and 113 to 115 volts of electricity would pass through the body. The city electrical inspector testified that a voltage beyond 25 would be considered deadly under the circumstances. Medical testimony disclosed that 115 volts of electricity would cause the death of a baby two and a half years of age.

Two doctors testified that in their opinion the child had been electrocuted. Plaintiff testified that the switch box was about ten inches from the table top which was on either side of the kitchen sink, and there was a chrome strip around it, and that her child’s legs were resting on the chrome strip with his right shoulder against the box. When she saw the child she grabbed him, and he was dead. She testified that she had never received a shock of any *630 kind from the box, and that she knew nothing of any shorts in the year and a half she had lived in the house, and that she had never touched the switch box and the metal strip at the same time.

The city electrical inspector testified that he found four violations of the electrical code. He observed that the insulation on one of the wires had been damaged and that the damage was at the point of contact with a half-inch Romex connector; that he found four No. 10 conductors which came through the connector, and the connector was clamped. The white conductor was pinched by the clamp so that the insulation had become impaired and an electrical contact was made by that conductor to this box so that the box itself was “hot”.

Mr. E gland testified he owned an electrical company and was the present employer of Mr. Gildersleeve; that he went to the premises in question after the child was killed and put his hand on the electric box and the rim around the cupboard and received a shock. He opened the lid of the electric box and observed on its cover that it was a Van Es box. He called Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
306 P.2d 159, 180 Kan. 627, 1957 Kan. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kurdziel-v-van-es-kan-1957.