Public Service Co. v. Sonagerra

1952 OK 462, 253 P.2d 169, 208 Okla. 95, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 899
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 23, 1952
Docket34962
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1952 OK 462 (Public Service Co. v. Sonagerra) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Public Service Co. v. Sonagerra, 1952 OK 462, 253 P.2d 169, 208 Okla. 95, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 899 (Okla. 1952).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This action was brought by Maggie Sonagerra, as plaintiff, against Public Service Company, a corporation, as defendant, for damages for injuries received by the plaintiff when she walked into the service lines of the defendant at night in her back yard. The parties will be referred to as they appear in the trial court.

The undisputed evidence discloses that several years before the injury complained of, the defendant ran two service lines from a post in the alley near the southeast corner of plaintiffs lot at an angle across the back part of plaintiffs lot to the Cuzalinas, who lived in the house just west of plaintiffs house. Plaintiff had a clothesline in her back yard. Defendant’s service lines ran diagonally across the back part of plaintiff’s lot to the Cuzalina house. They had a clearance of over ten feet and crossed above plaintiff’s clothesline at about a 45° angle. As a result of an unprecedented ice and sleet storm in the area the weight of the ice on defendant’s service lines which ran to the Cuzalina house caused the lines to sag until they rested on plaintiff’s clothesline. These service lines at the spot where they were resting on plaintiff’s clothesline were about chin high. There was also a telephone line across plaintiff’s back yard running from the same post in the alley to the Cuzalina house. This line had a lower clearance than defendant’s service lines. As a result of the storm this telephone line had sagged until it was flat on the ground.

Defendant’s evidence does not disclose just when it restored these particular service lines to their former condition. Its evidence is that the ice and sleet storm paralyzed its electric system in the whole area and that it was able to repair and restore its lines and service within the area in from ten to twelve days after the storm.

Plaintiff testified that these service lines were not repaired for twelve to fourteen days after the storm. That it *97 had been her common practice for more than 30 years to go to. the back of her property from five to nine times a day; that there was a barn on the back of the lot; that she kept her table scraps for her son who had a pig and every day she went out to the barn to take the scraps to the pig. There was a path from her house to this barn where the pig was. That she had walked two or three times a day from her house to the barn after the ice storm until the night of the accident which is the basis of this action. That she was careful in going out to the back of her property. That when she took the garbage to the pig the night she was injured, the lines were sagging and were lodged on her clothesline and that she had to stoop down to go under these wires in order to take the garbage to the pig. That at night she used the telephone wire which was on the ground as a guide to tell her where the service lines of defendant were. That on this particular night, with her hands full of garbage, she lost her way by failing to locate the telephone line on the ground which she used as a guide and walked into the service lines of defendant and fell and was injured. That she was injured the night of February 5th, but said nothing about it to the defendant until the latter part of June.

This ice storm commenced on January 24th and lasted several days. Plaintiff complained to defendant about the service lines being down in her back yard four or five days before night of the injury.

The defendant contends (1) that the evidence does not disclose any negligence on its part in the construction and maintenance of these service lines before the storm; (2) that the evidence does not disclose any negligence on its part in the repair of these service lines after the storm; (3) that an unprecedented ice and sleet storm, which amounted to an act of God, was the sole cause of the sag in defendant’s service lines and thus the sole cause of the injury to plaintiff.

The evidence shows that defendant’s service lines which crossed plaintiff’s lot and served the Cuzalina house were 194 feet in length; that there was no support for these service lines between the post in the alley back of plaintiff’s lot and the Cuzalina house.

We have made a careful examination of all of the evidence in the record.

This evidence shows that defendant complied with the provisions of the National Electrical Code and the orders of the Corporation Commission in running these service lines to the Cuzalina house. That there is no order or rule of any kind providing that service lines shall be of any certain length. That the safety factor involved in the length of a service line depends on the nature of the connections. That if a service line is run from a post of the defendant company to a substantial building where it can be securely fastened, it may run as far as 250 feet in length. In fact, service lines are all the way from 50 feet to 250 feet in length. The service lines to the Cuzalina house, which passed over plaintiff’s lot, were 194 feet long. It is natural that a service line 194 feet long will sag more than one 100 feet long. But these particular service lines had a clearance in - excess of ten feet.

There is no evidence in the record supporting the contention of plaintiff that extending these service lines for a distance of 194 feet made them unsafe. One of the defendant’s employees did testify that he did not like to run a service line longer than 160 feet. However, he did not say that it was unwise or dangerous to run such a line 194 feet or that there was any rule of the defendant or regulation of the National Electrical Code or order of the Corporation Commission against running service lines 194 feet. This testimony is wholly insufficient to create a conflict in the evidence with regard to the safety with which these service lines to the Cuzalina house were constructed.

The parties stipulated that the ice and sleet storm was an unprecedented *98 storm. Whether an ice storm constitutes an act of God is usually a question of fact for the jury. However, in this case, it was taken from the jury as a result of this stipulation. This stipulation constitutes this storm an act of God as a matter of law. Then, too, plaintiff testified that it was the most severe ice and sleet ’storm that had occurred in Wilburton during the 49 years that she had lived there.

An act of God is such an unprecedented storm or flood as will excuse from liability, provided it is the approximate cause of the injury as well as the sole cause of the injury. However, the defendant is liable if the injury is caused by an act of God, in connection with which the negligence of the defendant is a concurring cause, and the injury would not have occurred except for such negligence.

In City of Purcell v. Stubblefield, 41 Okla. 562, 139 P. 290, we said:

“Even if it were admitted that the wind was unprecedented on that day, and that there had never been such a wind as that before, yet, if the accident was not due entirely to this wind, but the strong wind in connection with the negligence of the defendant operated as an efficient and contributory concurrent cause, then the defendant would still be liable. The definition of an act of God, as given by this court, is ‘an act of God, such as an unprecedented rainfall and resulting flood which will excuse from liability, must not only be the proximate cause of the loss, but it must be the sole cause.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1952 OK 462, 253 P.2d 169, 208 Okla. 95, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 899, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-service-co-v-sonagerra-okla-1952.