Meehan v. Philadelphia Electric Co.

225 A.2d 900, 424 Pa. 51, 1967 Pa. LEXIS 748
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 20, 1967
DocketAppeal, No. 326
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 225 A.2d 900 (Meehan v. Philadelphia Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meehan v. Philadelphia Electric Co., 225 A.2d 900, 424 Pa. 51, 1967 Pa. LEXIS 748 (Pa. 1967).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Musmanno,

Louis Meehan, an electrician, was working on overhead electric wires when, brushing against a wire from which the insulation broke off, he sustained an electric shock which caused him to fall and sustain serious injuries. He brought a suit in trespass against the Philadelphia Electric Co., owner of the electric installation. At the trial, after he had presented all his evidence, the trial judge, upon motion by the defendant, gave binding instructions in favor of the defendant and the plaintiff appealed.

The Court below said that the plaintiff had not proved negligence on the part of the defendant; that, even if the plaintiff showed some defect in the insulation, there was no proof that the defendant had actual or constructive notice of the defect; and that, in any event, the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.

It is common knowledge that electricity is a highly dangerous agent and when it passes through a wire in sufficient voltage to be injurious to those who come into contact with it, the wire should be insulated if fore[53]*53seeably it may be touched by man or beast. The plaintiff’s case is predicated on the proposition that the wire which electrically burned Meehan and felled him to the ground was not properly insulated. “A company supplying electricity which is well known to be a dangerous agent, is bound not only to know the extent of the danger but to use the very highest degree of care practicable to avoid injury to everyone who may be lawfully in proximity to its wires and liable to come accidentally or otherwise in contact with them. . . It has frequently been held that the failure to insulate wires so placed is negligence.” (Shapiro v. Phila. Electric Co., 342 Pa. 416.)

The plaintiff had been sent by his employer to the plant of Rolling Rock Beer Distributors at 27th and Huntingdon in Philadelphia to tear out some old wires and install new ones. Working at the top of a ladder 18 to 20 feet above the ground he had installed the new wires and then descended to test the motors run by the electric current. He discovered that the wires had been connected in such a fashion that the motors ran in the wrong direction. He testified that in doing this job he had to operate on a trial and error basis because there was no way to “tag the motors” or to know “which wire was which from the roof to the metering because they were burned out. If I could have known which wire was which, I could have hooked up the insulation so that the motors would run in the proper direction but because they were burned out, it was a fifty-fifty chance, we had to hook them up, and if they don’t go in the right direction, we make the proper changes.”

He reascended the ladder and made the changes. In unscrewing the nut which had been turned rather tightly on the connector he exerted a muscular strength which caused the nut suddenly to turn and the plaintiff’s right arm dropped to a bank of three wires be[54]*54neatli. His arm fell against one of the three wires conducting 220 volts of electricity. The resulting shock threw him into the 5 wires above upon which he had been working. He fought against these wires and then lost control and fell 18 feet to the ground.

The plaintiff testified at the trial that when his arm scraped against the wires below him, the insulation broke off easily. Should insulation detach so easily? How useful would be a scabbard made of tissue paper, in containing a sword? The degree of care required on the part of an electric company was outlined in Yeager v. Edison Elec. Co., 242 Pa. 101, where this Court said: “Prudence requires those in control of a deadly current of electricity to exercise the highest degree of care in protecting the wires at points where persons in the course of their lawful employment are liable to come in contact with them.”

To demonstrate that the electric company here did not exercise the kind of care required in the circumstances, the plaintiff presented Morton H. Lerner, expert witness, who testified that the insulation covering the telltale wire was inadequate, that insulation for 120-to-240 voltage should have a 600 volts rating, rather than the one which enclosed it. He said further that if the insulation had been in good condition, the plaintiff would have felt no shock; also that the effective life of insulation of this type runs from 7 to 12 years. The wires here in controversy had been originally installed in March, 1927, and the company had no records to show that the wires had ever been renewed from 1927 until after the accident of November 9, 1959. Obviously, if the longevity of insulation is limited to 12 years and the accident occurred 32 years after the application of insulation, a question of fact would arise for the jury to determine whether this was not such a lack of maintenance as would spell out negligence. “The duty is not only to make the wire, safe [55]*55by proper insulation, but to keep it so by constant oversight and repair.” Fitzgerald v. Edison Electric Co., 200 Pa. 540.

The expert said that wires should be inspected from time to time to determine whether the insulation has deteriorated. The defendant company stated in answer to interrogatories that the wires had been inspected on the day prior to the accident but in view of the fragility of the insulation, as evidenced by its coming loose from the brushing against it of the plaintiff’s arm, a question of fact inevitably followed as to whether the inspection was efficient and reliable. There is no magic to the word inspection. Inspection must encompass a serious, sincere, sufficient scrutinization to ascertain defects before it can be regarded a reliable inspection. Whether the inspection measured up to these criteria was also a question of fact for the jury.

The learned court below said that if the insulation had actually deteriorated, there was no proof that the defendant had any notice of it. The fact that the company saw the wires the day before the accident is about as effective a notice as can be conjured. The testimony of the defendant’s general superintendent on the age of the wires was not very effective in refuting the plaintiff’s claim or bolstering the defendant’s defense: “Q. Tour records then show, do they not, that there were some service wires in place on that building that we are talking about in March of 1927. A. That’s correct. Q. And by service wires, I mean, of course, overhead wires that came from the pole out in the street and attached to brackets on the side of the building? A. There were some service wires in place. Q. And are you telling us you don’t know whether they were ever changed up until September, 1959? A. That’s correct.”

The trial court saw contributory negligence in the action of the plaintiff in his original installation of the new wires and concluded that this contributory negli[56]*56genee was the proximate cause of the accident: “Had the wires been properly connected in tbe first place it would not have been necessary for the plaintiff to readjust them and if be bad not fastened tbe nut in sucb a tight connection it would have more easily turned for removal. . . Thus, it was tbe plaintiff’s own acts wbicb set in motion tbe chain of events wbicb led to bis injuries, and not the condition of tbe insulation on tbe wires.”

This is a non sequitur in reverse.

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Bluebook (online)
225 A.2d 900, 424 Pa. 51, 1967 Pa. LEXIS 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meehan-v-philadelphia-electric-co-pa-1967.