Nelson v. Duquesne Light Co.

12 A.2d 299, 338 Pa. 37, 128 A.L.R. 1257, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 463
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 4, 1939
DocketAppeals, 161, 209, 223, 224
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 12 A.2d 299 (Nelson v. Duquesne Light 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
Nelson v. Duquesne Light Co., 12 A.2d 299, 338 Pa. 37, 128 A.L.R. 1257, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 463 (Pa. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

At 12: 30 a. m.,- December 8, 1935, Robert Messinger,the additional defendant above named, was.driving hi's automobile on Saw Mill Run Boulevard (hereinafter referred to as the boulevard), in a northerly direction towards the City of Pittsburgh. He had in the front seat with him as a guest passenger, David Nelson, husband of Catherine Nelson, the above named plaintiff. The automobile, while proceeding at a speed which' Mes-singer declared was about 30. or 35 miles an hour, collided with a wooden electric light pole located on the highway. As a result of the accident Nelson recéived injuries which caused his death about a week later.

The boulevard runs north and south in the City of Pittsburgh and is a four lane highway. At a certain point,-Nobles Lane (hereinafter referred to as the lane) runs off to the right of the boulevard as one lane roadway up the hill to Carrick. From this point on, the boulevard continues as a forty foot highway around a left curve for a distance of 200 feet when it continues as a thirty foot highway. Nobles Lane is in its direction really a continuation of the boulevard. The boulevard by curving to the left at the lane constitutes a very substantial curve, the degree of which is indicated on *40 the map exhibit but does not appear in the record. At the converging of the boulevard and the lane there is an intermediate triangular “island” or nontraversable area. The distance from the westerly edge of the concrete boulevard to the northerly, i. e., the broad end, of the island is forty-one feet. The Duquesne Light Company’s pole with which the car collided is “122 feet from the point of curve, which is practically the northerly end of the island.” The pole is situated in front of a service station of the Standard Oil Company and its distance eastward from the eastern edge of the thirty-foot paved highway is 5.54 feet. The width of the right-of-way of the boulevard at the locus of the accident is 70 feet. The old paved road of the boulevard is thirty feet wide; west of this there is twenty feet of unpaved highway, but east of it, i. e., in front of the service station the right-of-way is paved for twenty feet. If we take the fifty foot paved area as the boulevard and divide this into northbound and southbound traffic halves, the pole is located two feet westward of the center of the northbound traffic half. The colliding automobile was northbound.

It is apparent from the map exhibit in this case that an automobile traveling toward Pittsburgh and passing the “island” at the curve would, if it continued northerly in a straight line, crash into this pole. In order to avoid it a driver would have to veer to the right and pass between the pole on his left and the service station on his right. The pole was painted with black and white stripes for a considerable height. There was a 600 candle power light on the pole itself and similar lights near the traffic island. The pole was erected by the Duquesne Light Company in 1930 to take the place of two poles of theirs which had stood for some time six feet eastward from the edge of the pavement in a then (i. e., before 1930) unpaved portion of the right-of-way. These two poles were in front of a lot of the Standard Oil Company. The latter decided to erect a *41 service station on this lot and to pave with cement both the area in front of this station and also the 20-foot eastern strip of the right-of-way. The oil company requested the light company to remove the two poles and erect one pole in the right-of-way, 5.54 feet east of the old paved right-of-way. The light company secured a city permit for the installation of the pole. The issuance of this permit was under the authority of the Act of May 8, 1889, P. L. 136, sec. 2, which gives electric light companies the power to “erect and maintain the necessary apparatus for supplying light . . . and to distribute the same, with the right to enter upon any public street . . . for such purpose . . .; Provided” it obtains “the consent of such entry, of the councils of the city or borough in which such streets may be located.”

There was testimony that the light on the pole was located on an arm about thirty feet above the street and that the light did not reflect at all at or near the base of the pole. An employee of the gasoline station testified that from the latter part of June, 1935, to October 23, 1935, there were two accidents caused by collisions with the pole in question. He also testified that during the same period there were other machines that struck the pole but he didn’t consider them accidents because no serious damage was done. He also said that he saw “cars brush their fenders and bumpers” against the pole and then kept on going without stopping. He saw about “five cars do that” during that period.

The jury returned a verdict for $6,548.75 in favor of the plaintiff and against the City of Pittsburgh and the additional defendant, Robert Messinger. As to the other defendants, the Duquesne Light Company and the Standard Oil Company of Pennsylvania, the jury found that there was no liability, and, as directed by the court, it rendered a verdict in favor of Allegheny County. The city and Messinger appealed.

*42 In deciding the legal questions presented by this record these principles are applicable: (1) Municipalities which have full and complete control over the streets and. highways within their corporate limits are liable in damages for injuries sustained in consequence of their failure to use reasonable care to keep them in a reasonably safe condition for public travel. This is true even though the given condition in a street may not technically be.a. nuisance: Lawrence v. City of Scranton, 284 Pa. 215, 219, 130 A. 428. See also Norbeck v. Philadelphia, 224 Pa. 30, 73 A. 179.

(2) When a. telegraph or an electric light pole is erected in a. highway with the consent of the proper authorities, it is not. per se a nuisance. Dillon on Municipal Corporations, Vol. 3, sec. 1220, says: “Legislative sanction directly given by the legislature, or mediately conferred through proper municipal action, is necessary , to authorize the use of streets for the posts and wires of a telegraph or telephone company. If such posts be erected within the limits of a street or highway without such sanction, they are nuisances ;• but if the erection be thus authorized, they are not.”

(3) ' While the statute authorizes a municipal council to permit the.erection of a pole,or poles in a highway and thus exempt such poles from the status of a nuisance; the statute does not absolve the municipality from the duty of keeping its streets clear of obstructions which are both dangerous and unnecessary and which with reasonable care could be avoided. It is stated in 2 A. L. R. 496: “While trolley poles erected in a public street do not constitute a nuisance per se, they must be so placed as not to impede unduly the use of the street by persons on foot or in vehicles [italics supplied], and, if negligently so placed or constructed as to cause an unnecessary obstruction to traffic, may constitute a nuisance. Lambert v. Westchester Electric R. Co., 191 N. Y. 248, 83 N. E. 977.” In 13 R. C. L., page 199, sec.

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12 A.2d 299, 338 Pa. 37, 128 A.L.R. 1257, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-duquesne-light-co-pa-1939.