Langazo v. San Joaquin Light & Power Corp.

90 P.2d 825, 32 Cal. App. 2d 678, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 421
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 18, 1939
DocketCiv. 6071
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 90 P.2d 825 (Langazo 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
Langazo v. San Joaquin Light & Power Corp., 90 P.2d 825, 32 Cal. App. 2d 678, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 421 (Cal. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This is an action brought to recover damages arising out of the death of Gilbert Langazo, the minor son of plaintiff. Judgment upon the verdict of the jury was entered against appellant in the sum of $15,400. Upon motion for new trial, the sum of $5,000 was remitted therefrom. The appeal is taken from the judgment.

On the afternoon of February 22, 1937, the deceased, Gilbert Langazo, while walking across a field near Mariposa, traversed by a power line of the appellant, San Joaquin Light and Power Corporation, met his death by electrocution from contact with a sagging portion of an abandoned telephone line, attached to poles of the power line. The only witnesses to the fatal accident were his two girl companions, Phyllis Richardson and Hazel Swanzey. When the party reached the point where it became necessary to pass under the power line, Phyllis Richardson was walking a short distance ahead of Gilbert Langazo, the deceased, and Hazel Swanzey was a few feet behind. Hazel Swanzey is, therefore, the only person who saw all that happened. She testified that as Phyllis, who was ahead of the others, went underneath the telephone wire, she touched it with her hand and went over and sat down under a tree, “and as Gilbert (the deceased), reached the line he took hold of it with one hand to lift it over his head, and as he started to do that, to lift it over his head, he let out a scream” and fell, and that the witness “was just within one foot or two from his head when he fell”. She further testified that she and Phyllis are each about five feet *681 two or three inches in height, and that the sagging telephone wire, with reference to Phyllis’ height, “was not quite to the top of her head; it was along her forehead”. After the deceased fell, the witness observed that the grass at his feet was on fire, and she stamped the fire out.

Dr. John B. Webster, who was called to the scene of the accident immediately after it happened, testified that the deceased died as a result of electric shock, and that fact is not disputed.

The land on which the accident occurred is owned by the Mariposa Commercial and Mining Company, and has been leased to E. J. Gann for twenty-six or twenty-seven years. The scene of the accident is a wooded hillside about one hundred yards from the Mariposa High School, and was frequented both by the general public and by high school students. The general public had been accustomed for many years to walk over the land. This land was under lease to the lessee, Gann, for grazing purposes only, and at the time of the accident, was not plowed or under cultivation. In addition to the fact that the general public had had free access to the field in which the accident - occurred, and that they walked over and across it at will, it was shown that the field was used occasionally as a playground by a small number of high school students. The telephone line was disconnected in the year 1921. For some years prior to the accident the defendant had permitted unused fragments of the line to remain on the power-line poles at various points along the right of way. The portion of the abandoned telephone line which was the wire the deceased took hold of at the time of the accident, was attached to two of the poles carrying a high tension line, and there was an intervening pole from which the cross-arm which formerly carried the sagging wire had become broken, and the insulator and a part of the cross-arm had fallen to the ground, and the wire had thus become detached and permitted to sag between the other two poles to which it was still affixed. On the day of the accident the insulator attached to the broken part of the cross-arm which had fallen from the power-line pole was found imbedded in the dry, dead grass. This cross-arm had been broken a long time before the accident on February 22, 1937, as was evidenced by the appearance of the cross-arm which was admitted in evidence, and from the fact that the grass had grown up over *682 the cross-arm and the insulator affixed thereto, and from the photograph in evidence showing such condition.

The appellant had a right of way for its transmission line over and across the tract of land which was leased to Gann, the grant of the power company providing “that the party of the second part, its successors and assignors, shall exercise the rights hereby granted, in such manner as shall cause the least possible interference with the use of the said strip of land by the party of the first part, its successors and assigns, for pasture, agricultural, horticultural and mining purposes, or any thereof”. Just how the old telephone wire became charged with the fatal current of electricity is not disclosed by the evidence.

It is first contended by appellant that the evidence is insufficient to support a finding of negligence. Respondent takes the position that the case comes within the general rule “that a violation of a statute or of a county or municipal ordinance, which directly causes injury to another, constitutes negligence as a matter of law”. (19 Cal. Jur., p. 632, sec. 65.)

In this connection the latter relies upon a violation of the following general orders of the railroad commission of this state:

“Lines or portions of lines permanently abandoned shall be removed by their owners so that such lines shall not become a public nuisance or a hazard to life or property.” (Par. 31.7 of section III of General Order No. 64-A of California Railroad Commission.) “The owners and employees of such system shall at all times exercise due care to reduce to a minimum the hazard of accidental injury to their own or fellow employees, to the public and other utilities due to the presence of overhead wires.” (Par. 31.1 of section III of General Order No. 64-A of California Railroad Commission.)
“Lines shall be inspected frequently and thoroughly for the purpose of insuring their maintenance in a good condition so as to conform to these rules. Any defects found shall be promptly rectified. Lines temporarily out of service shall be inspected and maintained in such condition as not to create a hazard”. (Par. 31.2, sec. Ill, of above order.)

As to the sufficiency of the evidence to bring the case under the first order above quoted, the facts proven show clearly *683 that the jury were justified in finding that the telephone line in question was “permanently abandoned”. It had not been used for over a period of sixteen years, nor had it been in a condition where any use whatever could be made of it for a number of years preceding the accident. The span of wire with which the decedent came in contact lead nowhere. Each end thereof had been cut and wrapped around the cross-arm of the power pole to which it was attached. Under the middle pole, where the wire had become detached, an insulator which formerly supported the wire at that point, was found imbedded in the dry grass. The cross-arm was broken and a portion lay upon the ground, in a similar situation.

It is urged, however, that the regulations of the railroad commission mentioned above do not have the force of law, and hence are not within the rule quoted above from California Jurisprudence. This court decided the question adverse to appellant’s contention in the case of Morris v. Sierra etc. Power Co., 57 Cal. App. 281-289 [207 Pac. 262]:

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90 P.2d 825, 32 Cal. App. 2d 678, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langazo-v-san-joaquin-light-power-corp-calctapp-1939.