Osborne v. Russell

669 P.2d 550, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 466
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 26, 1983
Docket6823, 6867
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 669 P.2d 550 (Osborne v. Russell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osborne v. Russell, 669 P.2d 550, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 466 (Ala. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

On March 22, 1980, Gary Alan Osborne was electrocuted while working as an assistant manager at a Church’s Fried Chicken outlet in Anchorage. At the time of the accident, the decedent was apparently reaching into a floor safe when his forehead touched bare wires sticking out of an open electrical junction box located on the wall adjacent to, and immediately above, the safe. Patricia Ann Osborne, as personal representative of the estate of the decedent, filed suit against Randy Russell, d/b/a Randy’s Electric, the electrician who had performed electrical work at the store, alleging negligence and seeking recovery of damages for decedent’s wrongful death.

After trial, a jury returned a special verdict finding Russell not negligent. Osborne appeals the superior court’s failure to instruct the jury on negligence per se and its failure to direct a verdict in her favor on the issue of negligence. She also contends the superior court erred in submitting certain instructions to the jury concerning superseding cause. Russell cross-appeals the superior court’s instruction concerning the *553 measure of damages for the wrongful death of a person leaving no dependents.

The building in which the accident occurred was purchased by George Lamour-eaux, the owner of several Church’s outlets in Anchorage, approximately three months before the accident. Lamoureaux contracted with G. Robert Shower of Shower Construction to remodel the store and contracted with Russell to perform the electrical work necessitated by the remodeling. The store had previously been operated as a Pioneer Chicken outlet which used a gas system for cooking chicken. Lamoureaux wanted to change to an electrical cooking system and Russell was hired to hook this up, as well as to install outlets in a wall that Shower was to build.

Two to three weeks before the accident, Russell became aware that the wires which later caused Gary Osborne’s death were not insulated on the ends, were sticking approximately four inches out of the wall through an open electrical junction box and were “hot.” These wires were in a small office where Russell apparently had not been directed to perform electrical work. Russell was informed by Mr. Shower that a Shower employee received an electrical shock from the wires while working in their vicinity. To remedy the problem, Russell located the circuit leading to the exposed wires on the main circuit breaker panel, flipped the breaker switch to the “off” position and placed a piece of duct tape over the switch. Russell also tucked the protruding wires back into the open junction box, but he did not use electrical tape or plastic wire nuts to insulate their exposed ends. Russell testified that he placed duct tape over the breaker switch so that others would not re-energize the circuit, and also to serve as a “book mark” to remind him to insulate the exposed ends of the wires later on.

Russell continued to work sporadically on the premises, but he forgot about the exposed wires after taping the circuit breaker in the “off” position. The day preceding the accident, Russell was working on the circuit breaker panel and saw that all the breakers were in the “on” position. Someone had removed the duct tape and re-energized the exposed wires, but Russell’s “book mark” was no longer there to remind him and he did not independently remember that he had intended to insulate the ends of the wires in the open junction box.

There is a dispute as to the occurrences on the morning of the accident. Lamour-eaux claimed at trial that he called Russell at 8:00 a.m. and asked him to install an outlet for a calculator in the office where decedent was subsequently electrocuted. Presumably, this would have involved work on the open junction box containing the exposed wires. Russell testified that he was at Church’s Chicken that day from 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m., but denied that he was called there by Lamoureaux to install an outlet. He stated that he worked only in the front part of the store on that morning, hanging lights in the eating area. That same morning, Lamoureaux asked his handy man, Arnold Scheeler, to install an outlet for the calculator. Scheeler testified that he noticed exposed wires were protruding from the open junction box in the office, and that he touched the wires and discovered that they were “hot,” whereupon he informed Lamoureaux of the dangerous situation. Scheeler stated that Lamour-eaux then told him not to work on the outlet because an electrician was coming. Lamoureaux claimed that he expected Scheeler to fix the circuit right away. As a result of this confusion, the exposed wires remained energized and caused the death of Gary Osborne that afternoon.

I

Prior to trial Osborne submitted a proposed jury instruction which stated that, under the law of Alaska, 1 a person performing electrical work on a commercial building must comply with the safety rules set forth in the 1978 National Electrical Code, and that if the jury found that Russell had violated those rules, the jury should find him negligent as a matter of law. In sup *554 port of this instruction, Osborne presented expert testimony that Russell’s failure to insulate the bare ends of the wires which electrocuted decedent after learning of their existence and knowing that they were connected to the circuit breaker panel violated two provisions of the 1978 National Electrical Code. 2 The superior court declined to give this instruction to the jury, and Osborne argues on appeal that the court thereby committed error. 3

We have recently observed that in determining whether a negligence per se instruction is appropriate, the superior court should conduct a two-step inquiry.

First, it must decide whether the conduct at issue lies within the ambit of the statute or regulation in question, by applying the four criteria set out in the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 286 (1971). 4 This threshold determination is strictly a legal conclusion, and we will exercise our independent judgment in deciding whether the superior court interpreted the scope of the statute or regulation correctly-
Once it has concluded that the enactment applies to the allegedly negligent conduct, the superior court may exercise its discretion to refuse to give the negligence per se instruction. Such discretion is extremely limited, being confined to those “highly unusual cases” in which “laws may be so obscure, oblique or irrational that they could not be said as a matter of law” to provide an adequate standard of due care, or to those where the enactment amounts to little more than a duplication of the common law tort duty to act reasonably under the circumstances. The superior court’s disposition of the question of whether the enactment was too vague or arcane to be utilized as a reasonable standard of care will only be reversed on appeal if it constitutes an abuse of discretion.

Harned v. Dura, 665 P.2d 5, 12 (Alaska 1983) (citing State Mechanical, Inc. v. Liquid Air, Inc.,

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Bluebook (online)
669 P.2d 550, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborne-v-russell-alaska-1983.