Reed v. Duquesne Light Co.

47 A.2d 136, 354 Pa. 325
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 28, 1946
DocketAppeals, 40 and 41
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 47 A.2d 136 (Reed v. Duquesne Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reed v. Duquesne Light Co., 47 A.2d 136, 354 Pa. 325 (Pa. 1946).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

Ralph Thomas Reed, an employee of the American Bridge Company, was killed by electrocution on May 29, 1943, while at work on the premises of his employer. The lethal current came from overhead high tension wires of the Duquesne Light Company and was transmitted to Reed (who was on the ground) through a drop cable running over the outer end of the boom of a movable crane then operating near the wires. The wires carried a current of 22,000 volts; were uninsulated; and were elevated on poles at a height of thirty-six feet above the ground. The boom of the crane was sixty-five feet long and, at its angle of inclination, the outer end thereof was higher than the wires. The crane was the property of the Bridge Company and under the control of its employees. *327 At the time of the accident, the crane was being used to remove some telephone poles which were lying on the ground to the side of the wires opposite to that of the crane’s position. For the purpose of the work, Reed was holding a hook and metal sling attached to the lower end of the drop cable which he was dragging away from the crane for attachment to one of the poles. With the outer end of the boom higher than the wires, the further Reed dragged the drop cable toward the pole, the closer the cable was drawn to the overhead wires. While Reed was so engaged, an upper portion of the cable came in contact with the wires or within arcing proximity of them, thereby causing the current to ground, passing through Reed’s body in its course.

The decedent’s widow, as his administratrix, brought suit against the Duquesne Light Company, on behalf of the decedent’s estate, as well as for herself and the decedent’s next of kin, claiming damages for her husband’s death on the ground that it had been caused by the negligence of the Light Company. The latter impleaded the American Bridge Company as an additional defendant. The case went to trial as to both defendants and was so submitted to the jury. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the Duquesne Light Company, expressly exculpating it of negligence, and in favor of the plaintiff against the American Bridge Company in several sums. The verdict against the Bridge Company was of no avail to the plaintiff because of that company’s liability for compensation for its employee’s death. The plaintiff moved for a new trial of the suit as to the Duquesne Light Company. The court below refused the motion and directed that judgment be entered for the Light Company, also granting at the same time judgment n. o. v. for the Bridge Company, upon its separate motion, because of its accepted liability for compensation. From the judgments so entered, the plaintiff has appealed and assigns for error the refusal of a new trial and the court’s instruction to the jury.

*328 The appellant alleges that the learned trial judge erred in failing and refusing to charge that the Light Company was under a duty to inspect the land underneath the wires for the purpose of keeping itself informed at all times with respect to the work being carried on there by the owner of the property and of warning all persons of any consequent danger from the proximity of the instrumentalities of the work to the wires. The trial court’s action in such regard constitutes the whole of the appellant’s complaint. No error is assigned with respect to the admission or rejection of evidence at trial.

The power lines involved were installed by the Light Company in May 1942 over the property of the Bridge Company on orders from the latter and for its service. The appellant admits that the original construction was safe and proper. Expert testimony on both sides confirmed that the installation was of a usual and approved type. The plaintiff’s expert conceded that the original installation was safe and such as he himself would have constructed under the circumstances as they existed at the time of the installation. The only change in the circumstances attending the power lines from the time of their installation until the accident to Reed was wholly unrelated to the character of the original construction or the maintenance thereof but evolved solely from the use which the Bridge Company had come to make in the meantime (i.e., between May 1942 and May 29, 1943) of the land lying underneath the lines.

When the lines were installed the Bridge Company specified the land over which they were run as an inactive area as indeed it was. From where the lines entered the property of the Bridge Company to where they ran into a transformer (protected by a wire fence thirty to forty feet square), the ground was waste land with no building or structure of any kind erected thereon and unused for any purpose. Due to the expansion of the Bridge Company’s operations because of War work, a need for additional storage facilities developed. In that *329 situation, the Bridge Company made use of the ground under the high tension wires, using movable cranes from time to time, over a period of six months prior to the accident to Reed, for the placement and removal of materials in the locality. The Bridge Company never gave the Light Company any notice of its use of cranes near the high tension wires. Nor was there any proof that the Light Company was otherwise informed of the new use being made of the ground underneath the power lines.

We find no error in the trial court’s charge that was harmful to the plaintiff who had failed to prove any negligence on the part of the Light Company as the proximate cause of Reed’s death. Consequently, the Light Company’s motion for a compulsory non-suit should have been granted. The court’s instructions to the jury in submitting the case against the Light Company were, therefore, innocuous in any view so far as the plaintiff’s rights were concerned.

The Light Company’s duty was to install the high tension lines in a safe and proper manner and thenceforth to maintain them in a safe condition upon “reasonable inspection from time to time”: Matlack v. Pennsylvania Power and Light Co., 312 Pa. 206, 210, 167 A. 37. The propriety and safety of the original installation is admitted and there is no evidence that the Light Company failed in its proper maintenance of the lines or in its duty to inspect. Moreover, no defect or other fault in the power lines, as such, is alleged to have existed. Without some wrongful act or omission by the Light Company in respect of the lines, liability to the Bridge Company’s workmen would not result: cf. Valles v. Peoples-Pittsburgh Trust Company, 339 Pa. 33, 41, 13 A. 2d 19. The plaintiff failed to show any facts that would justify a finding that Reed’s death was the result of the Light Company’s breach of a duty which it owed the decedent.

What the appellant seeks to hold the Light Company responsible for is the dangerous condition created by *330 the Bridge. Company. Admittedly, no notice was ever given the Light Company of the use thus being made by the Bridge Company of its land lying underneath the power lines. Nor is there any suggestion that the Light Company had actual knowledge thereof otherwise. In the circumstances shown, there was no duty upon the Light Company to anticipate the danger brought about by the Bridge Company’s subsequent use of cranes in the locality of the high tension wires: Mirnek v.

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Bluebook (online)
47 A.2d 136, 354 Pa. 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-duquesne-light-co-pa-1946.