Mississippi Power & Light Co. v. Goosby

192 So. 453, 187 Miss. 790, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 108
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1939
DocketNo. 33893.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 192 So. 453 (Mississippi Power & Light Co. v. Goosby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mississippi Power & Light Co. v. Goosby, 192 So. 453, 187 Miss. 790, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 108 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Anna Goosby, the appellee, sued the Mississippi Power & Light Company, the appellant, for damages sustained by her because of the destruction of her house by fire, *794 alleging negligence on the part of the appellant in the construction and maintenance of its wires charged with electricity erected over and across the roof of her house. The only plea of the appellant to the declaration was the general issue. The verdict of the jury was for $3'50.

The declaration was amended so as to sue for the value of a pecan tree in her yard destroyed by the fire.

On Christmas night, of 1938, about ten o’clock, the home of Anna Goosby was destroyed by fire. It was a frame structure, covered with boards, the roofs thereof running up in a V shape. The house destroyed was on a lot at the corner of Elm and Washington Streets, facing- north, and on the east there was a chimney. She had lived there about thirty years and she claimed she was ninety-seven or ninety-eight years of age.

Instead of running the wires to the intersection of Elm and Washington Streets, the appellant had run the wires so as to cut across her lot. There were nine of these wires. They were old, had been there a long time; some of them were insulated, and some were not. The insulation was ragged, and the evidence of Anna tended to show that some of these wires dragged the comb of the roof of the house. When the wind blew the wires sagged and swayed. The sag in the wires was immediately over the roof of the house. Five of the wires were attached to a crossarm. Four were attached to a pole twenty-seven feet above the ground below the crossarm and about eight inches apart, one wire over the other. The wires ran to either side of or over the chimney; all except one was charged with electricity, and when the wind blew some of the wires would touch the chimney and the house. On this occasion it was drizzly, misting rain, and the wind was blowing.

Some of these wires had a voltage of 2300, others as high as 3000 volts. One had a voltage of 500 up to 3000 volts. There was a combination circuit carrying 220 volts. The fuse box was located on the south pole on Elm Street. The fuses were for the wires carrying low *795 current. There were no fuses on the heavy current or high voltage wires. Only two fuses blew out at the time of this fire.

This house consisted of one room and a shed, with a porch on the front of the living room. The old negro lived in what she called the kitchen close to the house, but not attached thereto. She had tenants, Charlie King and Carrie Eccles, occupying the room. At the time of the fire they were asleep. Their testimony tends to show that when they were awakened the fire was coming from the roof, and did not originate in the room. There was a crack between the wall and the chimney. When the fire was first discovered it was on the roof near the chimney, about the size of a washtub or ten gallon jug with a bluish-red flame, and there were flashes emitting along the roof of the house in proximity to the comb thereof. Some members of the fire department testified that as the wires burned and fell to the ground, they were emitting flashes of electricity, and they considered it dangerous to undertake to throw water on the house. No electric wires were installed connecting the house with electricity. There had been no fire in the house and no cooking done on that day, and the last fire used was for cooking supper on Christmas Eve night.

It was shown in evidence by an expert that if two wires of low voltage came together, they would form an arc, but, in the opinion of the witness, would not set fire to the house. A part of the wall on the east side near the chimney did not burn, neither did the floor. It was shown that water, as a conductor of electricity, contacted with high voltage wires would cause an arc between the two wires and create flames.

The evidence for the appellant tended to show that the fire originated on the interior of the house and burned upward: that insulation was no longer necessary in order to carry safely electricity; that some of the wires were covered with a rubber composition which was for the preservation of the wire; that when an arc was formed *796 between two wires the fuse boxes would blow out and thereby withdraw the current. Witnesses for the appellant testified that the wires were installed over the house and attached to the pole, varying from four to ten feet; that there was necessarily some sag in the wire in order to allow for expansion and contraction due to heat or cold; that this sag developed when the wires were first suspended. There were contradictions of the witnesses as usual in this class of cases.

The appellee, Anna Goosby, among other things, testified that she was awakened and carried from her room, did not know about the origin of the fire, but there had been no fire in the building. She testified in effect that the wires had been placed over her house by the appellant, without her consent, and had been there for years. She was afraid of the wires, had seen, on another occasion when a wire dropped, a tree burned in her yard, and on another occasion when a broken wire dropped in a puddle of water, she was warned not to approach it or she would be killed. She knew that one of the sagging wires rubbed against the chimney.

Prom this statement of the facts it will be seen that there was a sharp dispute as to whether the fire originated in the interior or on the roof of the house. There was sharp dispute as to the distance apart of the wires, and as to the height of the wires from the comb of the roof of the house, and there may be a dispute as to the effect of electricity conveyed by two wires which come in contact with each other and cause a short circuit. There is no dispute that after the wires had burned in two and dropped to the ground, electricity was being discharged therefrom. No witness undertook to say which of the wires was charged with high or low voltage.

To summarize the facts as viewed from the standpoint of the plaintiff’s evidence, we may conclude that there were no electric wires on the interior' of the house; there had been no fire for more than twenty-four hours within the house; and there was no fire in the fireplace. The *797 roof was wet, which, made it a good conductor of electricity. There was no evidence of a storm or lightning from the elements. Witnesses testified that the blaze was first seen on the roof and near where other witnesses claimed the wire sagged so as to touch the comb of the roof. Contact of high powered uninsulated wires in combination with a wet roof would probably cause a fire.

The principal assignment of error in this case on the part of the Mississippi Power & Light Company is that the court erred in refusing it a peremptory instruction for two reasons: the evidence did not establish that probably the fire was set out by the electric wires of the appellant, and the evidence of Anna Goosby shows that she assumed the risk. Appellant’s theory is that under physical laws it is shown in this record that the fire could not have been caused by the discharge of electrical current, and that the fire evidently originated in the interior of the house.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 So. 453, 187 Miss. 790, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mississippi-power-light-co-v-goosby-miss-1939.