Lindamood v. Potomac Light & Power Co.

100 S.E. 868, 85 W. Va. 85, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 112
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 100 S.E. 868 (Lindamood v. Potomac Light & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindamood v. Potomac Light & Power Co., 100 S.E. 868, 85 W. Va. 85, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 112 (W. Va. 1919).

Opinion

Poffenbarger, Judge :

This writ challenges the correctness of an order setting aside a verdict for the defendant in an action predicated on allegations of wrongful death, on the ground of newly discovered evidence.

A statement in detail of the evidence adduced upon the trial' and the procedure in the action is unnecessary. Plaintiff’s decedent, her husband, was killed in the plant of the Dunn Woolen Company, while there engaged in work as an employee of that company, by an electric current or by a fall occasioned in some unknown way. He was alive but unconscious, when found, and died immediately afterward. There is no living eye-witness to the fatal accident, and the evidence of negligence adduced was largely, if not entirely, circumstantial. The action is against the Potomac Light and Power Company by which electricity for lighting purposes was furnished to the plant in which he was working, not against his employer. Hence, the law of master and servant does not govern the rights [88]*88of the parties. The plaintiff proceeds upon the hypothesis of a defect in the wires or plant of the defendant company, negligently permitted, by reason of which an unusual and undue charge of electricity entered the plant of the Dunn Woolen Company, over the service wires, and caused the injury complained of. The theory of the defendant is that, on account of the situation in which the decedent was and defectiveness of the electrical appliances in the room in which he worked, for which it was not in any way responsible, they being no part of its plant or system, the electric current contemplated and furnished for the factory, 110 volts, was sufficient to kill the employee, if he came into contact with it by his own negligence or through the negligence of his employer, and did either kill him or knock him down in such manner that, in his fall, he received fatal injury, he having come into contact with it by reason of his own or his employer’s negligence.

His surroundings, his hands, the materials he was handling and no doubt his clothing were all damp and the electrical appliances used, unsafe on account of these conditions. He operated what is known as a drying machine through which he passed wet wool and shoddy taken from the vats in the dye house of the factory. It was of steel construction, new and set in concrete, at a point about eighteen inches from a partition wall, in a room the floor of which was new concrete not yet thoroughly dry. On it, there were three pulleys, each carrying a three inch belt. It had an air door which stood open at an angle of about 45 degrees with the steel edges, turned up. Near this door and over one of the pulleys, there was a thermometer and near it a drop electric light on a cord, used for lighting the dark space around the thermometer. The pulleys, bolts and steel door were unprotected by any guard or safety device. The wiring and sockets were unsuitable and bad for such a place, the wires not having been putln tubes, as experts say they should have been, and the sockets having been brass instead of porcelain. The workman’s hands, feet and clothing and the floor on which he worked were all damp and the air necessarily moist. Between 9 :30 and 10 o’clock of the night of February 26, 1917, he was found lying in the narrow space between the machine and the partition, in a puddle of blood. One of the belts was off, .the steel door open and the [89]*89light unextinguisbecL In Ms right temple there was a wound from which blood was flowing and which the examining surgeon said went deep into the tissue of the head, although it' looked like a superficial injury.

Appreciating and admitting the application, force and effect of the rule, res ipsa loquitur, the defendant, after the plaintiff had proved, prima facie, death from an electric shock, previous good health of the decedent and sufficiency of 110 volts to kill, introduced evidence proving, in the absence of contradiction, that its transformer reducing the high voltage, 2,200, to low voltage, 110, was in a safe condition and bore no evidence of disturbance by an unusual shock, and that its wires in the streets in the neighborhood of the Dunn Woolen Company were so arranged and insulated by .insulators on the poles and air spaces between the wires as to make them safe. Then it proved the defectiveness and unsuitahleness of the wiring and fixtures in the room in which lindamood was working, and, by expert testimony, that, under such conditions, the ordinary voltage was sufficient to kill one coming into contact with it. Proof was introduced also, to the effect that none of the wiring or fixtures in the room or building bore any evidence of their having been subjected to the heavy voltage carried by the high tension wires supplying electricity to the service wires through the transformer; and that the secondary or service wires and the wires and fixtures in the building could not carry the high voltage of the primary wires without injury or, in some instances, destruction.

In rebuttal, the plaintiff introduced testimony tending to prove the service wires would carry 1,100 or 2,200 volts for a short time, without any manifestation of its presence until a socket or wire would come in contact with something that would ground the current; that, on the night of the accident, wires were sparking at the corner of Stephen Street and Maple Avenue, at about 9 :30 o’clock on account of a limb that had blown over the secondary wires leading into the residence of one Barnard; that, on the morning after the accident a woman was knocked down by électric current in a house near the Barnard residence, while using an electric iron; that a man helping to remove Lindamood received a severe shock in the back by rea[90]*90son of bis coming into contact with the socket at tbe machine; and that another workman, a few minutes later, got a severe shock from taking the socket in his hand.

The new evidence discovered after the trial, which induced the trial court to set aside the verdict for the defendant, as interpreted by the attorneys for the plaintiff, was that, on the night of Lindamood’s injury and death, at about eight o’clock, in front of the County Jail, and not far from the Dunn Woolen Company’s fcuilding, one of the wires smoked, burned, sputtered and then broke, at a point about six feet from one of the poles, and fell among the other wires; that the defendant company was immediately notified by telephone; that it sent a man to that place, who tied the long end of the broken wire around a pole; that, on the next morning, a man came and spliced and repaired the wire; and that, after the trial and nearly a year after the date of the accident, a' splice was found in the defendant’s primary or high voltage wire, strung above other wires, at a point a few feet south of the pole in front of the County Jail.

This interpretation of the affidavits of the witnesses is vigorously assailed in the briefs filed for the defendant. The two Millers, the jailer and his son, do not say the wire broke on the night of the accident, but, fairly read, both affidavits place the date of the occurrence near that night. They say they resided in the jail on that date and saw the broken wire. M. S. Miller says ha is unable to say whether the break occurred on the night of Lindamood’s death. His son says he was at a hospital visiting his wife, when a message was received, calling a physician to attend a man at the Dunn Woolen Mills, who he afterwards learned was Lindamood, but does not say both incidents occurred on the same night. Affiant Hough, a policeman, says he saw the broken wire in front of the jail on the morning after the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 S.E. 868, 85 W. Va. 85, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindamood-v-potomac-light-power-co-wva-1919.