Northern Virginia Power Co. v. Bailey

73 S.E.2d 425, 194 Va. 425
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 1, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 73 S.E.2d 425 (Northern Virginia Power Co. v. Bailey) 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
Northern Virginia Power Co. v. Bailey, 73 S.E.2d 425, 194 Va. 425 (Va. 1952).

Opinion

73 S.E.2d 425 (1952)
194 Va. 425

NORTHERN VIRGINIA POWER CO.
v.
BAILEY.

Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia.

December 1, 1952.

*426 J. Sloan Kuykendall, Henry H. Whiting, and Wayne A. Whitham, Winchester, for plaintiff in error.

J. Lynn Lucas and Joshua L. Robinson, Luray, and William W. Lowell, New York City, for defendant in error.

Before EGGLESTON, BUCHANAN, MILLER, SMITH and WHITTLE, JJ.

WHITTLE, Justice.

Susie V. Bailey, administratrix of the estate of Jesse J. Bailey, deceased, sued the Northern Virginia Power Company, to recover damages for the alleged wrongful death of her husband.

The notice of motion for judgment charged that plaintiff's decedent, a laborer in an apple orchard operated by H. F. Byrd, Incorporated, met instant death by electrocution when a metal ladder, 24 feet in length, carried by him, came in contact with the electric wires of the power company. The notice further charged that the defendant knew or was charged with knowledge that the employees of the orchard used metal ladders in their work, and that they carried the ladders in an upright position; that notwithstanding this knowledge the defendant negligently maintained an electric distribution system through the orchard, carrying 2300 volts; that the wires were maintained at a height and in a manner which were hazardous and unsafe for decedent and other employees of the orchard company; that the defendant negligently failed to raise the wires to a height which would be safe, and that the wires were not otherwise insulated. It was alleged that as a proximate result of this negligence a high voltage wire was caused to come in contact with the ladder carried by decedent, causing his instant death.

The power company filed grounds of defense denying the allegations of negligence. In addition it filed a plea charging contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff's decedent, which it alleged was a proximate, contributing cause of death, to which a replication denying contributory negligence was filed.

The trial of the case before a jury resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff. A motion to set the verdict aside was overruled and judgment was entered thereon. To this ruling we granted the power company a writ of error and supersedeas.

Twenty-seven assignments of error are relied upon by the power company. These can be treated under five headings. The first challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to allow the jury to find the power company guilty of negligence.

Where we have, as here, a jury's verdict in favor of the plaintiff, which verdict has been approved by the trial judge, we must view the evidence in a light most favorable to the plaintiff. Neal v. Spencer, *427 181 Va. 668, 26 S.E.2d 70; Clayton v. Taylor, 193 Va. 555, 557, 69 S.E.2d 424, 426.

The evidence disclosed that at the time of Bailey's death, and for many years prior thereto, the Byrd orchard had occupied a large tract of land along Senseney road, near Berryville. Since 1936 the power company had operated a high voltage electric distribution line which was constructed over a right of way acquired from H. F. Byrd. The right of way extended over the orchard property parallel with and adjacent to the northerly side of Senseney road.

The distribution line consisted of three wires supported on cross-arms affixed to poles spaced approximately 300 feet apart; the two outer wires carried an electric current of 2300 volts; the inner wire was grounded and carried no current. The right of way was not fenced or in any way separated from the road or the orchard. Grass grew along the right of way and throughout the orchard property which extended to the northerly edge of the road.

On the day of the alleged fatal accident, May 24, 1949, and for several days prior thereto, plaintiff's decedent and other laborers in the orchard were engaged in thinning trees. This was a process of removing excess apples from the trees in which "the thickest ones of them and the smallest ones" were clipped off the branches.

To perform the work the orchard company furnished the laborers with ladders, some made of wood and some of metal. Bailey had been furnished a 24-foot aluminum ladder, weighing 37 pounds. He had been instructed by Mr. Wood, the foreman, to carry the ladder in an upright position when moving it from tree to tree.

On the day of the alleged accident Bailey and other orchard workers reported for work at 7:00 a. m., and under orders from the foreman they took up their work where they had left off the day before. When the work in this block of trees neared completion (within an hour) the foreman directed the workers to move forward to another block of trees located a few rows to the east on the same side of Senseney road.

Bailey had not completed thinning his tree, and the foreman directed Mrs. McDonald and her son to help him finish the work. While this work was being completed the foreman and the other workers, including Mrs. Bailey, moved to the other block of trees. Mrs. Bailey walked along a wagon trail leading from Bailey's tree down a grade to the clearing between the first row of trees and the northerly side of the electric wires. She continued along the orchard property on the side of the power line to the new block of trees three or four rows to the east.

Mrs. McDonald testified that when Bailey finished his work he removed his rubber boots, changed to walking shoes, lifted his ladder upright and walked with it in that position down the wagon trail, following the general course taken by his wife. Mrs. McDonald followed Bailey but turned back to get a jacket that had been left on a tree. When she again came in sight of Bailey, "he was standing with his ladder up, and he just fell. It was so quick." The electric wires were right over where he fell; they were sagging "right where he was". She testified "the ladder was right up into the wires, and when I looked, I seen him, he just fell so quick."

Mrs. McDonald called the foreman who came running to the scene with the other workers. In the meantime she removed the ladder from Bailey's face. "He drawed up his arms and legs all up—drawed one of his legs up." Bailey turned black. "He made two or three moans * * * he didn't talk any."

Foreman Wood testified that the ground around where Bailey fell was wet.

The evidence disclosed that the distribution line was 24 feet from the ground and that the closest wire measured on a horizontal plane between lines projected vertically from the nearest wire to the closest branch of a tree was 12 feet.

The evidence further disclosed that the power company had been previously notified that an orchard worker by the name of Buddy Pierce was involved in an accident in the orchard when his metal ladder came in contact with its electric wires. The Pierce accident happened about eight *428 months prior to the alleged Bailey accident, and the company had done nothing to remedy the situation except "they came out with posters and little pamphlets cautioning the people about (not) to use metal ladders near a power line." No change was made in the wires, they were "exactly the same."

The power company contends that no negligence on its part has been proven.

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.E.2d 425, 194 Va. 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-virginia-power-co-v-bailey-va-1952.