Meche v. Gulf States Utilities Co.
This text of 436 So. 2d 538 (Meche v. Gulf States Utilities Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Mrs. Mary Jane C. MECHE, Individually, as Natural TUTRIX OF and for the Use and Benefit of Her Three Minor Children, Alton Joseph MECHE, Pamela Ann Meche and Mary Rhodnoda Meche, James A. Meche, Tina Meche Midkiff and Patricia Meche Naquin
v.
GULF STATES UTILITIES COMPANY.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
*539 Joe J. Tritico, C. Jerre Lloyd, Lake Charles, for applicant.
Fred S. Sievert, Jr., Robert S. Dampf, Stockwell, Sievert, Viccellio, Clements & Shaddock, Lake Charles, for respondent.
LEMMON, Justice.
The principal issue in this case is whether Gulf States Utilities acted unreasonably in extending an uninsulated high voltage line through the interior of a mobile home park at a height of 23 feet and is consequently liable for the injuries and death which resulted from contact with that line.
I.
On February 15, 1980, at about 5:00 p.m., Leroy Meche, along with other members of his family, visited at his daughter's mobile home, which had been moved into the Atherton Trailer Park the previous day. The family dined together and then attempted to watch television, but found the reception poor. Meche, along with his daughter's husband and others, drove to the daughter's former home to retrieve the television antenna, which had not yet been moved. They returned at about 8:30 and attempted to install the 27-foot, 10¾-inch antenna on the north side of the trailer. As Meche and others raised the antenna towards a family member on a ladder next to the trailer, the antenna struck Gulf States' uninsulated 7,600-volt electric line, which ran parallel to the trailer. Meche was killed, and his son, Joey, was seriously injured.
After trial in the ensuing litigation, the jury answered special interrogatories and found that Gulf States was not negligent and that the electric power line, although in Gulf States' custody, was not defective and did not create an unreasonable risk of harm.
The court of appeal affirmed. 416 So.2d 1316. Relying on this court's decision in Kent v. Gulf States Utilities Co., 418 So.2d 493 (La.1982), the court concluded that the jury's findings were not clearly wrong. We granted certiorari to review these rulings. 420 So.2d 972.
II.
The electric line in question was installed in July, 1979, at the request of the trailer park owner, who had begun expansion of an *540 existing trailer park. The area of expansion was approximately 176 wide on the public road and 250 feet deep.
Gulf States was already supplying electric service to the trailers in the existing trailer park from a 7,600-volt line along the western boundary of the area of expansion. Gulf States decided that the best location for the new line was either along the northern (or rear) boundary or along the eastern boundary of the area of expansion, but rejected these when the adjoining landowner refused to grant a servitude for construction on the boundary line. Gulf States then decided to construct the line 50 feet south of the northern boundary, running east and west from the existing line on the west and extending between two rows of trailer stalls. The lines were hung from 35-foot poles, with the energized line on the bottom at a height of approximately 23 feet above the ground and the neutral line three feet above the energized line. At the time that the new line was installed, there were mobile homes in the existing trailer park, but the proposed stalls in the area of expansion were not yet occupied.
Meche's daughter's trailer occupied a stall in the second row south of the north boundary line. The energized line was 13 feet, 4½ inches north of (in front of) the trailer and 12 feet, 115/16 inches from the top of the trailer roof.
The National Electric Safety Code requires that uninsulated line over driveways, roads and residential areas be at least 20 feet above the ground. There were no specific requirements in the Code for the height of lines in trailer parks. The expert testimony conflicted on whether compliance with the minimum standards for heights over residential areas and roadways was sufficient for trailer parks.
Plaintiffs' expert, Dr. Ambrose Ramsey, Jr., testified that trailer parks present a different situation than residential areas and that more precautions should be taken because of the mobility of the homes and the frequent necessity of connecting utilities and of raising television antenna. He opined that the line at the minimum height for residential areas did not comply with the general rule in the Code that all equipment and lines should be installed and maintained so as to reduce hazard to life as far as practical. (Rules 200, 210, 211 of the National Electric Safety Code.) Ramsey suggested that safer alternatives would have been to construct the line on the boundary as originally planned, to place the line underground, to insulate the line, or simply to hang the energized line higher on the same pole. Ramsey also explained that the 7,600-volt uninsulated line, which ran parallel to the trailers, created a greater risk of accident and exposure than if the lines had run perpendicular to the trailers.
Plaintiffs' second expert agreed that a line which extended through the trailer park, parallel to and between spaces, presented a hazard, and he also suggested alternatives which would have made the area safer.
Defendant's expert, Dr. Wayne Roelle, testified that the line was in complete compliance with the National Electric Safety Code. He opined that the line was reasonably safe, since the line was visible in daylight and since a person's raising a 27-foot antenna into a line during hours of darkness was not reasonably foreseeable. He dismissed the plaintiffs' experts' suggestions for alternatives in that they solved some problems while creating others.[1]
III.
Similar issues were addressed in Thomas v. Gulf States Utilities Co., 128 *541 So.2d 323 (La.App. 1st Cir.1961), in which the court stated:
"It is reasonable to anticipate that people who live in trailers will have television antennas, and that such antennas may be raised to heights in excess of the minimum requirements of heights of wires required by the National Electric Safety Code and in excess of the height of the wires in this instance. Trailer homes are normally temporary in nature, necessitating frequent putting up and taking down of TV antennas. The space which these antennas occupy is clearly an area where people normally go for work or pleasure, creating a corresponding duty on the part of the company maintaining high-voltage lines to exercise the greatest degree of care to protect the public."
See also Annot. 82 A.L.R.3d 113 (1978).
Gulf States contends, and we agree, that mobile homes are not moved frequently in modern living and that there should be no difference in this case between a mobile home and a permanent home in the pertinent location. However, mobile homes in a trailer park are generally (as they were in this case) placed closer together on smaller lots than permanent homes in a subdivision and are generally served by fewer streets (on which the high voltage lines are frequently located in subdivisions). Extra precautions may be necessary because of special circumstances.
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436 So. 2d 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meche-v-gulf-states-utilities-co-la-1983.