Mills v. Virginia Electric and Power Company

90 S.E.2d 124, 197 Va. 547, 1955 Va. LEXIS 254
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 28, 1955
DocketRecord 4411
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 90 S.E.2d 124 (Mills v. Virginia Electric and Power Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mills v. Virginia Electric and Power Company, 90 S.E.2d 124, 197 Va. 547, 1955 Va. LEXIS 254 (Va. 1955).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

*548 C. B. Mills, an employee of defendant, Virginia Electric and Power Company, was seriously injured when he came in contact with an energized primary wire installed and maintained by the company. In his claim for compensation filed before the Industrial Commission of Virginia, he asserted that he had suffered an accidental injury arising out of and in the course of his employment.

The company filed a plea and defense under § 65-35, 1 Code of 1950, in which it asserted that claimant’s injury was proximately caused by his wilful misconduct and violation of safety rules promulgated by the company and known to him.

As a result of complainant’s injury, he suffered a retrograde amnesia, which produced a loss of memory of events immediately prior to and incident to his injury, and that prevented him from testifying as to how he was injured. On evidence offered by other witnesses, the hearing commissioner, W. F. Robinson, entered an award for compensation. In his written opinion he stated that claimant knew of and violated defendant’s safety rules adopted for his benefit, but defendant had failed to prove that claimant’s violation of the safety rules proximately caused his injury.

Upon review the Commission concluded that claimant’s wilful misconduct and violation of the safety rules were the proximate cause of the injury. The award of the hearing commissioner was vacated and compensation denied. From that finding and order, Commissioner Robinson dissented, and we granted an appeal.

Claimant earnestly insists that the evidence does not support the finding of wilful misconduct and that if he were guilty of wilful misconduct, the evidence is insufficient to establish that his misconduct proximately caused his injury.

The rule promulgated by the Industrial Commission under authority of § 65-35 bearing upon the defense of wilful misconduct of an employee follows:

*549 “Wilful Misconduct. — If the employer or insurance carrier intends to rely upon the defense of ‘wilful misconduct’ under Section 14 [now § 65-35] of the act, it shall file with the Commission, previous to the hearing, furnishing a copy of the same to the employee or his attorney, a statement of its intent to make such defense, together with a statement of the particular act or acts relied upon as showing wilful misconduct.
“In the absence of such plea the employer may introduce evidence of wilful misconduct upon the provisions of Section 65-35, as a defense to liability on the issue there was no accident arising out of and in the course of employment.”

The defense filed by the company complies with the Commission’s rule and is amply sufficient to meet the requirements of § 65-35.

The company’s rules promulgated for the protection of its employees and contained in its safety manual required claimant to wear rubber gloves when working upon equipment carrying “voltage from 0 to 3500 phase to ground.” Parts of sections 7 and 9 of the safety manual 2 embodying these rules were introduced in evidence. It was also shown that claimant was aware of these reasonable rules and requirements, and that they were rigidly enforced by the company.

On the day of the mishap a six-man crew of defendant’s employees, under the supervision and direction of foreman L. S. Painter, was engaged in the repair of defendant’s electric lines in the city of Newport News, Virginia. The undertaking required that the linemen work upon three or more poles, upon which an energized electric line was suspended. The crew, exclusive of Painter, consisted of one first class lineman, four second class linemen (including *550 claimant), and B. J. Walker, a less experienced employee, classified as a “second class lineman learner.” Claimant had been in the employ of defendant for several years and was classified as a second class lineman. He had acquired considerable experience in work of this character, and the testimony of his foreman discloses that he was competent to undertake and perform the work assigned to him at the time he was injured.

Shortly prior to his injury Mills came down from a pole where he had been working, removed his rubber gloves and sleeves and placed them in the pocket on his belt. Foreman Painter then directed him to go up another pole where Walker was working “to show him and tell him” how to make a tie, which was termed by Painter as “quite a simple job.”

To make a tie a short wire is placed around an insulator on the pole arm, and by it the energized wire is secured to the insulator. In this instance the tie wire was in place on the insulator, and the work required of claimant “was just a matter of tightening it up” to hold the energized wire more securely to the insulator.

The primary wire on which this tie was to be made carried a 3450 unit delta voltage, and when claimant was directed to make the tie he knew that this was a live wire and he had been warned by his foreman about working on an energized circuit.

After telling claimant to make the tie, Painter’s attention was directed elsewhere and he did not see Mills go up the pole. How he became apprised of the mishap and what he saw is disclosed by the following testimony:

“Q. What called your attention to the accident?
“A. I heard an arc and heard somebody groan.
“Q. An electric arc?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. What did you see?
“A. I looked up the pole and Mills was in contact with his right hand and I said, ‘Good God, somebody get down here quick.’ ”

In response to Painter’s exclamation and request, Guy C. Higgins, the lineman first class among the crew, rescued Mills. He accomplished this by going up the pole, putting his own safety belt around Mills and then knocking Mills’ hook loose and releasing his foot from where it was held by a guy wire. By freeing Mills’ hook and foot, he was caused to fall away from the wire and break the contact. Higgins then applied resuscitation and carried Mills to the *551 ground. Both Higgins and another witness, J. H. Dawson, Jr., stated that when they heard Painter’s exclamation, they looked and saw Mills and that his contact with the wire at that time was along the side of his face and ear. His hands were then hanging down and smoke was coming from his feet. When he was freed from his contact and brought to the ground, his rubber gloves were in his glove pocket and he had on his canvas-sleeved, leather-palmed gloves. Upon examination of the gloves that he was wearing, it was found that there was a burned hole through the inner leather surface over the middle finger of the right-hand glove.

In the attending physician’s report, his injuries were described as “point bums on right hand and both feet and face. Third degree bums on both feet, left calf, right hand and right ear.”

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90 S.E.2d 124, 197 Va. 547, 1955 Va. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-virginia-electric-and-power-company-va-1955.