Nelson v. Branford Lighting & Water Co.

54 A. 303, 75 Conn. 548, 1903 Conn. LEXIS 31
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 4, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 54 A. 303 (Nelson v. Branford Lighting & Water Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelson v. Branford Lighting & Water Co., 54 A. 303, 75 Conn. 548, 1903 Conn. LEXIS 31 (Colo. 1903).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

In 1887 the town of Branford built a highway bridge over Branford River, with a draw. It was a truss bridge, with a railing on each side. On the westerly side of it, outside the railing, was a platform with steps leading down to a small landing for boats, which was eight feet below the roadway. Ever since the construction of this bridge, the boys and young men in the neighborhood had been, with the knowledge of the selectmen, in. the custom of bathing from it, in summer, and, while so doing, of running and exercising themselves upon and jumping and diving from all parts of the bridge and draw; the smaller boys confining themselves to the landing, platform, and floor, but the larger ones diving and jumping from the railings and trusses.

In 1896 the defendant constructed a line of wires for electric lighting purposes along the highway, and bolted one of its poles to the piles of the bridge at each side of the draw. An iron pipe was attached to each pole, through which the wires were carried down to the bottom of the river and across the bottom. In the summer of 1900, in lieu of this arrangement of the *550 wires, overhead wires were strung between these poles, which could be detached and removed whenever a vessel passed through the draw. These ran over fourteen feet above the floor of the bridge, and that nearest the west edge of it was about five feet five inches above the peak of the truss, and seventeen inches west of its west face.

The selectmen inspected the defendant’s line in 1896, and approved it. They were not consulted as to the change of construction made in 1900, and it did not appear that they approved it. The use of the bridge for bathing purposes continued thereafter as before, with their knowledge and that of the defendant.

The wires above the draw were insulated so as to protect them against the weather, but not so as to make personal contact with them safe. The current was turned on every day towards dark and then they were dangerous to handle. No notice of such danger was given by the defendant, although it knew that the bridge had so much iron in and upon it as to be a good conductor of electricity, and that the current was liable to diversion, if one standing on the bridge should touch the wire overhead, particularly if he were wet at the time.

In July, 1901, at about a quarter before seven in the evening, the plaintiff’s intestate, a boy of sixteen, who had been in the water while bathing from the bridge, walked up the west truss, clothed only in bathing trunks, to the peak, which was over seventeen feet above the river, and asked some boys below if they thought he would touch bottom if he dove from there. He then faced about to the west, and;—whether voluntarily or instinctively to prevent a fall did not appear— caught hold of the nearest of the overhead wires, and was killed almost instantaneously by an electric shock. He knew that the wire was an electric light wire, and that a boy had received a shock a year before, while climbing the nearest of the poles for the purpose of diving, but it did not appear that he knew that the wires were dangerous to handle.

The Superior Court has found that the defendant failed to prove that it was not negligent in running the overhead wire as it did, with no greater precautions against danger to *551 bathers, and failed also to prove that the boy was guilty of contributory neligence.

There is nothing in the facts specially found inconsistent with these conclusions.

The defendant was bound to a very high degree of care in the use for its own purposes of a highway bridge. McAdam v. Central Ry. & E. Co., 67 Conn. 445, 447. In determining what precautions against danger to human life were reasonably necessary, it was bound to consider all the uses to which the bridge was customarily put. It is found that it was convenient to the defendant to have the wires no higher above the truss; but convenience in such a matter is a subordinate consideration. The bridge, as part of a public highway, Avas open to general public use. Under the law of this State, the purposes of a highway are not regarded as wholly restricted to serving the right of passage. He who is standing on one, as a mere sight-seer to gratify his curiosity, is rightfully there. Bunnell v. Berlin Iron Bridge Co., 66 Conn. 24, 36. The custom of boys to dive from the bridge was known to the defendant. The selectmen, who represented the town which owned it, had knoAvn of this practice for fourteen years. So far as appears they had expressed no disapproval. Silence for so long a time might naturally be taken as importing acquiescence. It was for them, and not for the defendant, to determine how the town property should be used. As far as the defendant is concerned, the plaintiff’s intestate was rightfully on the truss, and the defendant owed him the duty of not unnecessarily exposing him to dangers to life which reasonable care on its part could avoid. It could have insulated the wires more effectively. It could have strung them out of the reach of one standing on any part of the bridge. It could have carried them across the river as it originally did, in a pipe laid on the bottom of the river. It could have put up a notice of danger. The trial court had the right to take into Anew what the company had not done as well as what it had done, in determining whether it had fulfilled its burden, under the default, of disproving the charge of negligence.

The default also threw upon it the burden of proving its *552 claim that the plaintiff’s intestate was not himself in the exercise of due care. There were circumstances indicating that he was lacking in this. There was no proof of any justifying cause for his grasping the wire, and it was in proof that he grasped it at a time of day when he had reason to apprehend that the current might have been turned on. But while he knew the purpose which the wire served, it was not shown that he knew that there was danger in touching it. It was encased in a preparation of cotton fibre and paint. Had the casing been rubber or gutta-percha, the danger from contact with it would have been slight. A boy of his age is not necessarily chargeable with knowledge of the different modes of insulation and their comparative effect. That he had knowledge that the casing contained a wire, and that an electric light wire, did not, as matter of law or of logical necessity, show that he was not in the exercise of due care, under the circumstances of his situation. It was to be and was considered by the trial court; but it was not absolutely controlling.

The only proof, on the point of damages, was that the intestate was a bright, active, intelligent boy of sixteen, five feet, two inches high, who for nearly three years had been a general clerk in a village grocery and driver of a delivery wagon. This was not insufficient to uphold the award of 15,000. It is true that, since this' amount is, under our statute, the extreme limit of recovery in an action for a wrong resulting in the death of the injured party, the plaintiff thus receives all that could be given for the loss of the most valuable life. It is also true that the life of this lad cannot be considered as possessing any extraordinary value. He had, however, a long expectation of life.

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Bluebook (online)
54 A. 303, 75 Conn. 548, 1903 Conn. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-branford-lighting-water-co-conn-1903.