McCabe v. Narragansett Electric Lighting Co.

59 A. 112, 26 R.I. 427, 1904 R.I. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 59 A. 112 (McCabe v. Narragansett Electric Lighting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCabe v. Narragansett Electric Lighting Co., 59 A. 112, 26 R.I. 427, 1904 R.I. LEXIS 99 (R.I. 1904).

Opinion

Blobgett, J.

This is an action of the case for the recovery of damages for the death of the plaintiff’s intestate, Thomas E. McCabe, her late husband, on September 16, 1903, from an electric shock, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant. At the trial the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of $19,000, and the case is now before us on the defendant’s petition for a new trial. Briefly stated, the undisputed facts are as follows:

(1) The plaintiff’s intestate was at the time of the accident the proprietor of a stable at Biverpoint, and in the month of August his premises had been wired for electricity, which was furnished by the defendant corporation. The company sent out from its station in Providence a current of'two thousand volts, which was stepped up, or converted by transformers, into eleven thousand volts, and was carried at that voltage to the substation at Apponaug, and then at the substation at Apponaug it was stepped down again, or transformed, into two thousand volts, and at that voltage was sent throughout the town of Warwick and the Pawtuxet Valley; and when it was desired to send the electricity into a building for the purpose of lighting incandescent lights, it would be further converted by a transformer into a current of one hundred and four volts and thus delivered to their customers, of whom McCabe was one. The entire building had been wired, and the light which caused the trouble was located in the washroom of the stable. On the evening of September 16th, at about 8:45 P. M., one McMann went, to the stable to get a board. To get this board McCabe went to the washroom, by the door of which stood McMann. • What happened next is thus told by the latter:

“Q. 6. What happened? A. Well, he went'in there to *429 get a board fór me. I liad a window broken in my barber shop that night, and, as I say, he¡ went in to get a board, into this storeroom, and by going through the washroom there was. a light hanging there, and he .went to turn this light, on, he reached up to turn the light on, and as he did I saw.a spark come out of one of his hands, I don’t remember, whiph, and he made a grunt, 'Oh!’ and lay there on the wire. I hollered to turn the switch off, to my brother.”

Peter Massie was also with McMann when the accident happened. He testifies: “When he turned the light .on he got hold of the wire to take a knot out, to work in the back room with it, and as he did I saw a blue flame coming out,of his arm, and I grabbed hold of him to pull him away, and as I did so I got a shock.”

At the time of the accident the transformer, which was used to reduce the current to one hundred and four volts for the McCabe stable and a few other buildings in the immediate vicinity, had burned out, which resulted in letting the alternating current of two thousand volts into the wiring of the stable. This condition was not known to the defendant company, or to any one, prior to the accident to McCabe.

A transformer, such as the one in this case, is made up of two coils of insulated wire, one coil having twenty times as many turns of wire as the other coil. The coil with the greater number of turns is connected with the high voltage or “primary” wires which come from the substation at Apponaug to the transformer, and the' other coil is connected with the low voltage, or “secondary,” wires which run from the transformer to the interior of the buildings lighted. These two coils are not connected, but are very carefully insulated from each other. Electric force thus passes from the large coil to the small coil by induction, the number of times the current is thereby reduced being determined by the relative number of turns of wire on the two coils.

The first and second grounds for a new trial are set forth in the petition, as follows:

“First. Because said verdict is against the law and the evidence and the weight thereof.
*430 “Second. Because the testimony shows that the defendant was not guilty of negligence.”

Neither one of these grounds can be sustained. It was not disputed that the defendant had contracted to furnish and the plaintiff’s intestate had contracted to receive a current of only one hundred and four volts, and that the premises in question were properly wired and insulated for a current of that voltage. Neither was it disputed that a current of not more than three hundred volts is harmless; that death can not be caused by a current of less than five hundred volts, and that the shock which caused the death of McCabe was approximately two thousand volts. It was not denied that the transformer from which the current' entered McCabe’s premises was made in 1893; that it was never inspected by the defendant after having been placed in position; that there were no lightning arresters in this vicinity, no fuses,' nor grounding of the secondary wires; -that the oil requisite for the proper action of the transformer had not been kept replenished; and that the transformer was originally made for an alternating current of one hundred and twenty-five cycles, which had been changed to a current of sixty cycles, thereby impairing the efficiency of the transformer; and, even more than this, that, whereas approximately twenty lamps were what is technically termed a proper “load” for a transformer of such type, yet here more than sixty lamps were supplied from this transformer, of which lamps, on an average, practically thirty were simultaneously in use at night.

It would serve no useful purpose to recite all the testimony in detail upon these points, and we are content to say that all these facts are abundantly established by the evidence, and many of them are so established from the lips of the witnesses for the defence.

Thus the testimony of the witness Fenner, the superintendent of the defendant’s lines in the territory in which McCabe’s premises were located, is as follows (p. 286): “C. Q. 74. You had there an old transformer? A. Yes, sir. C. Q. 75. No grounds? A. No, sir. C. Q. 76. No fuses? A. No, *431 ■sir. C. Q. 77. No lightning arresters in that vicinity? ' A. No, sir.”

And the testimony of James E. Cole, an engineer with eighteen years, experience in electrical affairs, the chief inspector of the engineering department of the city of Boston, called by the defendant as an expert witness, upon cross-examination, was thus given: "C. Q. 130. If this transformer was kept filled with oil, would it have been as apt to burn out? A. No, sir. C. Q. 131. From any source? A. No, sir. C. Q. 132. Would you say it was a good practice to put upon that transformer, a one hundred twenty-five cycle transformer, sixty-four lights, over thirty of which were lighted continuously almost every evening? A. As you state it, no, sir. ■C. Q. 133. That would be apt to weaken the transformer? A. Yes, sir, it would. C. Q. 134. So it would more easily burn out? A. It would. C. Q. 135. The secondaries, grounding them is the best means of preventing too great a •current from going into a building over the secondary wires, is it not? A. I think I know what you mean, and I will answer it the way you mean, it is the best way I know of. ■C. Q. 98. Now are fuses in common use on transformers? • A. They are. C. Q. 100. They are in use by all electric lighting companies, are they not? A.

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Bluebook (online)
59 A. 112, 26 R.I. 427, 1904 R.I. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccabe-v-narragansett-electric-lighting-co-ri-1904.