Phoenix Light & Fuel Co. v. Bennett

63 L.R.A. 219, 74 P. 48, 8 Ariz. 314, 1903 Ariz. LEXIS 81
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1903
DocketCivil No. 812
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 63 L.R.A. 219 (Phoenix Light & Fuel Co. v. Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phoenix Light & Fuel Co. v. Bennett, 63 L.R.A. 219, 74 P. 48, 8 Ariz. 314, 1903 Ariz. LEXIS 81 (Ark. 1903).

Opinion

DAYIS, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant company from a judgment rendered against it in an action for damages for alleged negligence, which, it was claimed, resulted in the destruction of the plaintiff’s property. The complaint upon which the action was founded, after stating.the residence of the parties and the corporate character of the defendant, alleged, “that, at all the times hereinafter mentioned, defendant was engaged in the business of supplying electricity, by virtue of a public franchise, to its certain consumers and patrons in and near the city of Phoenix, and of wiring and equipping the houses and buildings of its said patrons and consumers for the purposes of lighting such houses with electricity; that on or about the first day of April, 1899, the defendant, in changing the wires in the house of plaintiff, on North Second Avenue, near the city of Phoenix, negligently, [318]*318wrongfully, and willfully caused the wire conducting electricity from its plant to plaintiff’s house to be placed through the window casement of plaintiff’s said house, without insulating the same in any manner whatsoever; that wholly by reason of said negligent placing of said wires as aforesaid, and without any knowledge, consent, or fault of plaintiff, said wire became charged with electricity on or about the eighteenth day of July, 1899, and set fire to and wholly destroyed plaintiff’s said house, and furniture and effects of plaintiff therein, being of the value of five thousand dollars, to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of five thousand dollars; that, at all the times herein mentioned, plaintiff was a purchaser and consumer, for hire, of the electricity furnished by defendant.” A motion to require the plaintiff to make his complaint more definite and certain, by stating how and whence “said wire became charged with electricity,” was denied, and a demurrer to the sufficiency of the complaint was overruled. The further answer of the defendant was a general denial of the allegations of the complaint, and upon the issues thus made the case was tried before the court and a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $3,404.50.

The evidence adduced on the trial showed the following facts: That the house of plaintiff at Phoenix, Arizona, was occupied by himself and family as a residence. It was an ordinary story-and-a-half brick house, which he had built during the latter part of the year 1896. At the time the house was built, it had been wired for the purpose of electric lighting by persons not connected with the defendant. That the first attachment with the defendant’s plant was made at the front of the house, the wires entering through an upper window. The wiring remained in that condition for about two years. In the spring of 1899 the defendant changed its pole line to the alley back of the house, and then the wires connecting the defendant’s plant with the plaintiff’s house were changed to the back part of the house. The defendant placed its wires through the casement of a garret window at the rear end of the house in making the new connection. This change was without the knowledge of the plaintiff until some time after it had been made, but it appears never met with any protest from him. On- the eighteenth day of July, [319]*3191899, at about nine o’clock in the evening, the house was burned, together with a large part of its contents. A thunderstorm had been prevailing on that evening. The plaintiff was just going to bed, when he noticed a glimmer on the stairway. He ran upstairs, and saw that there was a fire in the window casement on the south side of the window, which he made ineffectual efforts to extinguish. About two hours before this the electric lights were on in the plaintiff’s house, and he was reading by the same. Suddenly the lights went out—“just popped off.” The plaintiff went upstairs, examined the wires in the part of the house where the connection had been made by the defendant, and examined the entrance of the wire into the house to see if it had come apart. He observed the condition of the wire at that point, and the insulation. He found the wires connected. The junction with the house wiring was on the inside of the upper story. This part of the house was not completely floored. The wires entered the house through auger-holes in the window casement. There were no crockery tubes or clay bushing where the wire penetrated the casement. In the unfloored space between the casement and the point at which it passed under the floor, there was two or three feet of slack in the wire. Plaintiff could not see that which passed through the casement, but such wire as was visible to him was in a damaged condition. It was frayed, and the insulation was loose upon it. It was not held tight at the point of entrance. It was an old wire, and had been in that condition from the time it was put there. Plaintiff had previously noticed this wire, and the loose way in which it was fixed up, but never so closely as on this occasion. There were porcelain spools on the eaves of the house, from which the wires ran into the window, and similar insulators along the garret joists, on the inside. There was no fuse-box at the window. The plaintiff used lamplight after the electric lights went out, and resumed his reading downstairs. When he first saw the fire, it was in the window casement, immediately surrounding the wires. The blaze was two and one half feet in length, about four to six inches above the wires, and some distance below. The plaintiff was at the time hiring the use of electricity from the defendant for lighting purposes. On the morning after the fire the employees of the defendant took down the wires in the [320]*320vicinity of the plaintiff’s house, and found them to be in fairly good condition, except that they were burned for a distance of twelve or fourteen feet from the building. The transformer, near by, which controlled the current to the plaintiff’s house, was found to be uninjured. The usual and ordinary strength of this current was one hundred and four volts. Evidence was introduced as to the value of the property. A number of witnesses also testified as to the condition of the night; that a severe electrical storm was raging, during which there was a peculiarly bright flash of lightning, followed by a heavy clap of thunder, shortly after which they noticed fire coming from the roof of plaintiff’s house. There was expert testimony to the effect that electric light companies make no attempt to insulate their wires against lightning, and that it is not practicable to do so.

Numerous errors are assigned by the appellant, but those which we consider to be fully determinative of this appeal are predicated upon the instructions which were given to the jury. The gravamen of the complaint in this case was the defendant’s failure to properly insulate the wire which it “placed through the window easement of plaintiff’s house.” The peculiar facts of the ease afforded an unusual opportunity for theorizing upon the cause of this fire. It was a theory of the plaintiff that the rain blown in at the auger-holes of the window casement had wetted the woodwork and wires, creating what is technically termed a “short circuit,” and setting fire to the woodwork. The evidence cannot be said to sustain this theo:ry, however, except upon the assumption that the voltage was greater than that of the ordinary current which passed over these wires from the defendant’s plant for his lighting purposes. But the plaintiff contends that it was equally the duty of the defendant to so insulate these wires as to protect against an electrical current which might have been induced from the clouds or atmosphere.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 L.R.A. 219, 74 P. 48, 8 Ariz. 314, 1903 Ariz. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phoenix-light-fuel-co-v-bennett-ariz-1903.