Piculjan v. Union Electric Light & Power Co.

234 S.W. 1006, 208 Mo. App. 331, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 110
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 8, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 234 S.W. 1006 (Piculjan v. Union Electric Light & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Piculjan v. Union Electric Light & Power Co., 234 S.W. 1006, 208 Mo. App. 331, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 110 (Mo. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

DAUES, J.

— This is an action for dámages for personal injuries alleged to have been received by plaintiff while in the hallway of her residence, located in St. Louis County, Missouri, the injury being caused, by a limb falling from a tree to which certain guy wires of the defendant company were attached.

The petition alleges that the defendant corporation is engaged in furnishing electric light and power, and that it maintained upon Hummelsheim avenue, a public highway in St. Louis County, poles and wires to distribute electric current; that it had placed a wooden beam in the forks of a tree located in said road near the property line of the plaintiff to support certain guy wires and used said tree to support the guy wires in connection with its line of poles; that the wooden beam in the forks of the tree caused the tree to die and the limbs to become decayed; that plaintiff in November, 1917, was severely and permanently injured while in her home by a dead branch of said tree falling against the door of her residence and causing the door to strike her.

*334 The petition alleges negligence of the defendant in attaching the wires to the tree so as to canse the tree to die, and in failing to cnt off the dead branches as they occurred. And, “that defendant herein was negligent in failing to trim and cut off said deadened and decayed limbs from said tree at a time when said defendant was using said tree as a part of its system of .poles and wires, and was using said tree as a support for its wires, and when defendant either knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care would have known, that said tree and the branches and limbs thereon were dead and likely at any time to break and fall, and when defendnat either knew or by the exercise of ordinary care would have known, that said tree^ was in a public highway and in close proximity to the said residence of plaintiff and said Peter Piculjan, and that said deadened and decayed branches and limbs were likely at any time to break and fall and injure persons and property in the immediate vicinity of said tree.”

Defendant demurred to the petition, which being overruled, was followed by answer which admits, among other matters, the public character of the road, the location of the tree, the use of same by guy wires as described in the petition; and, answered further, as follows:

“Defendant, further answering plaintiff’s said petition, states that the tree described in plaintiff’s petition was the property, by reason of her title to the adjacent premises, of the plaintiff Margaretta Piculjan, and is the owner of said tree as aforesaid, it became and was the 'duty of the said plaintiff herein to maintain said tree in a reasonably safe condition, and defendant states that the injuries, if any, sustained by the plaintiff in the manner and at the time set forth in her said petition were the result of plaintiff’s own negligence in -failing to keep said tree in a reasonably safe condition. ’ ’

The answer further denied that the guy wire or the manner of its attachment to the tree interfered with the rights and duties of the owner to have and take possession of same, or keep and maintain the same or its branches in a safe condition. The answer included a *335 general denial. To this, plaintiff replied by general denial.

The case was tried by the court and jury, resulting in a verdict of $1,000 for the plaintiff. After appropriate motions defendant appealed.

The facts, when skeletonized from the record, are as follows: Plaintiff while scrubbing the floor of a room in her residence fell over a bucket of water which was being used by her at the time, the fall resulting from an outside door of her home suddenly opening and striking her. She and other witnesses testified that a limb from a deadened tree on the sidewalk line next to her property in Iiummelsheim avenue fell from a cause unknown against the door. It appears that the defendant company at the time and for some time prior thereto had a guy wire attached to a piece of timber which was placed in the fork of the two main branches of this tree. The wire was so attached and so designed to hold certain line poles in place.

The tree in question had been partially dead for several years prior to the date of the accident. 'It is not clear when this decay began. The limb which fell, it is admitted, was not one of the limbs supporting the piece of timber to which the guy wire was attached, but a branch of the tree higher up and some distance away. The tree was a very large and branching one. Witness Jennewein, testifying for plaintiff, said the limb broke off about twenty-five feet from the ground.

The property in which the plaintiff lived belonged to her and her husband, held as an estate by the entirety. Plaintiff in the trial below entirely abandoned the theory that the defendant caused the limb of the tree to die and break off, but stood squarely upon the proposition that it was the duty of the defendant company to have used ordinary care to have prevented the limb in question from falling from the tree. Likewise, that is plaintiff’s theory here before us. There was no evidence to show any connection between the falling of the limb and the maintenance of the guy wire.

*336 Counsel for respondent in Ms brief states the theory of the case as follows:

"The theory contended for by respondent and the one adopted by the trial court was simply this; when the defendant took possession of the tree in question and adopted the same as a part of its system of poles and wires, it assumed the obligation to keep the said tree in a reasonably safe condition. It therefore became the duty of the appellant, having the possession of said tree to see that any dead branches which overhung adjacent buildings were trimmed. ... It certainly would have been defendant’s duty to keep a pole in reasonably safe condition and it likewise is its duty to keep a substitute for a pole in a reasonably safe condition. ’ ’

Defendant assigns as error the refusal of the court to instruct the jury at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, and again at the close of all of the evidence in the case, to find for the defendant. This at once presents the question of liability of the defendant on the facts in the case.

Appellant maintains that the tree was the property of plaintiff. The books abound in cases that an abutting property holder owns the fee tou the center of the highway, subject of course to an easement of the right of passage in the public, with necessary incidents flowing from the public use. [Webb v. Strobach, 143 Mo. App. l. c. 473, 127 S. W. 680; Cartwright v. Bell Tel. Co., 205 Mo. 126, 103 S. W. 982; Ashurst v. Lofhoefner, 170 Mo. App. l. c. 331, 156 S. W. 805; Walker v. City of Sedalia, 74 Mo. App. 70; 13 R. C. L., sec. 116.]

This being so, the owner has the right to remove the tree at his pleasure. But respondent says that when the electric company placed a timber supporting a guy wire in the tree it adopted the tree as a part of its pole line system, and that then the company was required to keep the tree in reasonably safe condition so that its branches would not fall and injure persons or property. We cannot assent to this doctrine.

*337

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Bluebook (online)
234 S.W. 1006, 208 Mo. App. 331, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piculjan-v-union-electric-light-power-co-moctapp-1921.