Parsons v. Appalachian Electric Power Co.

176 S.E. 862, 115 W. Va. 450, 100 A.L.R. 615, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 90
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1934
Docket7825
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 176 S.E. 862 (Parsons v. Appalachian Electric Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parsons v. Appalachian Electric Power Co., 176 S.E. 862, 115 W. Va. 450, 100 A.L.R. 615, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 90 (W. Va. 1934).

Opinion

Kenna, Judge:'

Densil Duty, a boy of eleven years of age and plaintiff’s decedent, lost his life on the 27th day of September, 1932, by comihg in contact with a high tension electric wire carrying 6600 volts owned and maintained by the defendant, Appalachian Electric Power Company, and stretched across a public bridge over the Guyandotte River at Chapmansville in Logan County. The bridge carried both vehicular and foot traffic and was in three spans' with a steel superstructure: The largest span was in the middle, a smaller span was on the Chapmansville side of the bridge, and the smallest span, and the one oh which the boy was injured, was at the end of the bridge away from Chapmansville. The electric line was Stretched on wooden cross-arms that extended out from the superstructure or framework of the bridge, on the outside, between • seventeen and eighteen feet' above the bridge’s floor. These arms carried the wire,' at some *452 points seventeen inches from the steel superstructure of the bridge, and at the point where the boy came in contact with the wire, a distance of 26 inches from the superstructure. The testimony shows that plaintiff’s decedent resided with his parents on the side of the river opposite Chapmansville, and that he, together with some thirty or forty other children, was accustomed to cross the bridge several times daily in going to school in Chap-mansville. On the day that he came in contact with the wire, he, together with one or two other boys, climbed into the superstructure of the bridge. The Duty boy was climbing a vertical beam or truss of the bridge, the dimensions of which do not directly appear in the evidence, but which was made of two flat and solid steel uprights connected at the edges by diagonal lattice work of steel strips which formed a footing in the triangular opening between the steel strips and side pieces that it was possible to use in climbing it. It is inferable from the testimony that the Duty boy was climbing the beam by putting his arms partially around it as he ascended and that when he reached the approximate level of the wire, he either slipped or fell against the wire or put out his hand and touched it in his climbing. At any rate, he made contact with the wire by touching it with his left hand.

There is direct testimony that on two or three occasions the boy had been warned of the danger of climbing the superstructure of the . bridge, both- on account of the danger inherent in that sort of play and on account of the danger that existed from the presence of the electric wires. There is evidence .also that children had, for a number of years, been accustomed to climbing onto the superstructure of the bridge, and that on several specific occasions witnesses had seen boys playing in the superstructure of the bridge.

This action was brought in the circuit court of Logan County, tried to a jury, a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $7,000.00 was rendered, and from the judgment-pronounced on that verdict, .this writ of error is prosecuted. There are but two .assignments:

*453 First, that the record does not disclose primary negligence on the part of the defendant.

Second, that the record does disclose contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff’s decedent, and that in either case, the trial court should have directed a verdict in favor of the defendant.

.A point is raised as to an instruction given on behalf of the plaintiff, which told the jury in effect that if the defendant knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care should have discovered, that children were accustomed to playing in the superstructure of the bridge, that it thereupon became its duty to anticipate that they might do so and to either safely insulate or remove their wires from danger of coming in contact with' children so playing. This assignment, however, is interwoven with the assignment predicated upon the lack of negligence on the part of the defendant, and the proposition of law involved in the instruction will be discussed in connection with that assignment of error.

We are of the opinion that the case cannot be reversed upon any of the assigned grounds of error.

As to the matter of the defendant’s primary negligence, we do not believe that it is necessary to decide whether the case falls within that class of cases wherein by reason of the circumstances shown, defendant electric company must have anticipated that persons would go about their wires, whether or not it is- shown that any persons have actually gone there, in the case of Runyan v. Water & Light Co., 68 W. Va. 609, 71 S. E. 259, 35 L. R. A. (N. S.) 430, for example, it was held that an electric company must anticipate ‘ that workmen, such as painters, would be required to go into the superstructure of a large bridge. The question, then, would perhaps arise, whether any person outside the one single class whose presence at the placé of injury must be anticipated, can recover on the same showing.' ' In other words,. because the company must anticipate thé presence, of workmen and guard against injury to them, does it’owe the same duty to any *454 one who might lawfully be at the same place? We do not believe that it is necessary in this case for us to decide that point. Here, there is ample showing in the record that children did, from time to time, go into the superstructure of the bridge.- Indeed, some of the witnesses stated the matter so strongly that it might reasonably be inferred that it was a habit or custom for boys to climb about the bridge, and other circumstances of the case, particularly the showing that a large group of school children crossed the bridge several times daily during the school term, are background for this testimony. It is true that it is not shown that the company had actual knowledge of the fact that children were accustomed to play in the superstructure of the bridge and near its dangerous. wires, but we think that actual knowledge is not the test. The alertness (degree of care) required of a company furnishing electricity to prevent injury from exposure to the deadly agency that. it handles, is measured by the danger itself. It must exercise this alertness not only under the conditions that exist when its wires are placed and of which it has actual knowledge, but it must exercise it in the light of changing conditions of which it should have had knowledge. The case of Love v. Power Co., 86 W. Va. 393, 103 S. E. 352, is authority in this state for this proposition. Therefore, since the electric company in this case was chargeable with knowledge that children were likely to play or climb into the superstructure of the bridge, it must anticipate that they would come there, and must exercise a high degree of care to prevent them from being injured by the current carried in its wires. In this case, the dangerous wire was within 26 inches of a place that an active boy might climb. At other points, it was as close as 17 inches. Either distance is little more than a child’s arm length. While it is shown that, for the voltage carried, insulation could not be provided that would furnish' protection on contact, it at the same time appears conclusively that appropriate means could have been adopted to carry the wires fair enough from the superstructure to keep persons who were there from coming in contact with them.

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Bluebook (online)
176 S.E. 862, 115 W. Va. 450, 100 A.L.R. 615, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parsons-v-appalachian-electric-power-co-wva-1934.