Meehan v. Adirondack Electric Power Corp.

88 Misc. 235, 150 N.Y.S. 714
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 88 Misc. 235 (Meehan v. Adirondack Electric Power Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meehan v. Adirondack Electric Power Corp., 88 Misc. 235, 150 N.Y.S. 714 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Whitmyer, J.

Vincent Meehan, a bright, active boy, ten years, eight months of age. and nearly five feet tall, was killed in the village of Saratoga Springs, N. Y., on May 6, 1913, at about seven-thirty p. m., by a current of electricity from or through a gooseneck, attached to an electric light pole, belonging to defendant. He had grasped the gooseneck, preparatory to sliding down the pole. This stood in a street or public alley of the village and was used by the defendant to support its wires in its business of furnishing electricity for light, heat and power. It stood seven inches away from the wall, which separates the high school grounds, in said village, from the said street or alley and was placed there under the direction of the street and water board of the village. It was eight inches in diameter and smooth. The gooseneck attached to it was on the side of it, away from the wall. That was sixteen feet above the level of the alley, ten feet above the level of the school grounds and three feet, nine inches above the top of the wall. A wire ran through it. The wire carried a current of 2,000 or 2,300 volts [237]*237and fed an incandescent lamp at the end of the goose-neck. Intestate and three other hoys had been playing ball on the school grounds on the night in question. At the end or during the course of the game, three of the boys, intestate’s older brother, fourteen years old, intestate, and Joubert, eleven years old, climbed up on the wall, for the purpose of playing “ tag ” or follow the leader.” Rowland, the fourth boy, did not go up. He went to the alley. The boys went up at a point one hundred and fifty feet easterly from the pole in question, where there was a gate. At this point, the top of the wall was five feet, three inches, above the ground. At the pole, it was six feet above the ground. The post of the gate was twenty-two and one-half inches square and attached to it were hinges, which were used by the boys in climbing up. The top was eighteen inches wide and had a tin covering, with cone-shaped nubs over the anchor bolts, which had been flattened from use. When they reached the top, they ran toward the pole in the order named. Intestate’s brother reached it first. He put his arms around it and slid to the ground. He did not touch the gooseneck and did not receive any shock. Intestate came next. According to Rowland, who was in the alley, he put his right arm around the pole and grasped the goose- ■ neck with his left hand. In this position and while his feet were still on the wall, he received a shock and fell to the ground, dead. Rowland says that the lights went down, when he grasped the gooseneck. Joubert says that he saw sparks coming out of his hands. Dr. Towne says that there was a scar on his right hand near the palm. He also says, that an examination made immediately after the accident showed that the wires were bare. Owen, the electrician, examined the gooseneck a day or two later and found that the wire was uninsulated, was “ rather had,” where it entered [238]*238the gooseneck. Hays, seven or eight days before that, had observed that the wire •“ fluttered,” where it entered the hood. And Hopkins, about ten days before, had seen a flash at the same place. • This evidence was practically undisputed. In addition, it appeared, from plaintiff’s case, that boys, ranging from ten to fifteen years of age, had been and were accustomed daily, both during and after school hours, to use the wall and the pole in question in their games of “ tag ” and “ follow the leader,” by climbing the wall, running along it toward the pole and sliding down the pole, in the same way. Rohan, defendant’s superintendent, who had lived in the neighborhood for ten years, testified that he never saw this. On this evidence, the jury found for plaintiff in the sum of $5,000, and also found, specifically, among other things, (1) that boys, prior and down to the time of the accident, were accustomed to use the wall and the said pole as places for play; (2) that defendant was reasonably chargeable with knowledge of such custom; and (3) that defendant, in the exercise of reasonable care, should have anticipated that boys might use the wall and the pole as places for play. The evidence was ample to sustain these findings, but defendant claims, even so, that intestate was either a trespasser or, at best, a licensee, and that its only duty to him was to abstain from inflicting intentional or wanton or willful injury upon him, and that there is no evidence of that, so that the complaint should be dismissed. In Braun v. Buffalo G. E. Co., 200 N. Y. 484, 492, the court said: “ The fundamental and general principle that a company like respondent, if reasonably chargeable with knowledge, or in the exercise of reasonable prudence bound to anticipate, that people may lawfully come in close proximity to its wire's either for purposes of business or pleasure, is under obligation to exercise care to [239]*239keep the latter in a safe condition, is abundantly established.” The intestate in that case was killed, while engaged as a carpenter in the erection of a building on private premises in the city of Buffalo, by taking hold of two wires strung and maintained by defendant across said premises and carrying an electric current of high voltage. It was decided that it was a question for the jury whether the company ought not, in the exercise of reasonable care and foresight, to have apprehended that the lot, over which the wires were strung, might be so used as to bring people in contact with them. In Daltry v. Media Electric L. H. & P. Co., 208 Penn. St. 403, the defendant was held liable for injuries from a defectively insulated wire which was strung across a private lawn and which came in contact with plaintiff, a boy ten years old, who had passed from the street onto the lawn to play. The court said: “ Having constructed the line across the lawn to the house in proximity to the carriageway, it knew that children as well as adults might frequent the way and, hence, the necessity of keeping its wires in a proper condition and repair to avoid danger. It must be presumed that the company also knew what the evidence disclosed as a fact that children used the lawn of the premises néar the gateway and in the vicinity of the wire as well as the street in front of the premises as a playground. * * * It was, therefore, the duty of the company * * * to take reasonable precautions to prevent injury to persons who might be at this point.” In Temple v. McComb City El. Light & Power Co., 42 So. Rep. 874, a demurrer was overruled to a complaint in which it was in substance stated that the plaintiff, a boy ten years old, had been injured by coming in contact with a live wire strung by defendant through a tree with branches reaching nearly to the ground in a thickly populated [240]*240neighborhood and in which plaintiff and other children played. In holding that the bill stated a cause of action, the court did so not on the ground that the defendant actually knew of the habit of the plaintiff and other children, but on the ground that “ it did know the tree, the kind of tree, and, knowing that, knew what any person of practical common sense would know — that it was just the kind of a tree that children might climb into to play in the branches. ’ ’ In Caruso v. Troy Gas Co., 153 App. Div. 431; affd., 209 N. Y.

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Flaherty v. Metro Stations, Inc.
202 A.D. 583 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
88 Misc. 235, 150 N.Y.S. 714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meehan-v-adirondack-electric-power-corp-nysupct-1914.