Rice v. Kentucky Utilities Co.

155 S.W.2d 760, 288 Ky. 170, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 31, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 155 S.W.2d 760 (Rice v. Kentucky Utilities Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rice v. Kentucky Utilities Co., 155 S.W.2d 760, 288 Ky. 170, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 69 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Morris, Commissioner—

Affirming.

On September 1, 1937, appellant, a lineman of tbe Northeastern Telephone Company, was injured by touching a telephone wire said to have been supercharged by contact with appellee’s wire. He did not make his employer a party, but joined as defendant the McG-lone Construction Company then.doing road work in Clay County, alleging that its employees had caused the contact of the two sets of wires. We shall refer to the companies respectively as power, telephone and construction.

The appeal presents one question: Did the lower court erroneously instruct the jury at the close of appellant’s evidence to find for the power company? The construction company answered without waiving motion to quash the summons against it; this motion was sustained and the case proceeded against the power company. There is no cross appeal.

*171 The petition specifically charges that the construction company “so negligently operated a steam shovel over a roadway as to cause part of it to come.in contact with the wires of the telephone company,” which in turn contacted the highly charged wires of the power company, whereby the telephone company’s wires became heavily charged; that plaintiff who was at work at the time on telephone wires received a severe shock.

It is then charged that the power company negligently operated and maintained its wires and poles in such a dangerous manner as to cause the telephone wires to become charged with high and dangerous voltage, “all of which negligence, jointly and severally, was the direct and proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries.” Plaintiff asserts that he did not know of the dangerous position in which hé had been placed, in time to have avoided injury, but that defendants could have so known by the use of ordinary care. Plaintiff sought to recover of defendants $1,000 for loss of time and $25,000 for physical pain, suffering and anguish. The power company answered, denying material allegations in so far as the petition charged it with negligent maintenance and operation, and plead contributory negligence.

The controlling question is as stated above, and we find little or no dispute as to facts. As to physical situations, (not too clearly detailed), we gather that the telephone company had first erected its poles and wires. The telephone exchange is in Manchester, and serves Clay County and a few adjoining counties. The power station nearest Manchester and point of wire contact, is at London; this is a sub-station, the power coming from a main station at Pineville, supplying Manchester, some coal mines and other operations.

The telephone and power poles were located on one side of a roadway near Manchester, 'and ran parallel with the road for a distance. Both were built on a slight elevation; the distance from the road is not given, but the telephone poles were 6 to 8 feet further from the road than the power poles. The' telephone company’s lines came from its exchange in Manchester across a creek, which ran parallel with the road and were attached to one of its poles. The telephone company in order to serve a grocery company and an oil station had run a line down (or up) the road the length of one span *172 which was attached to another pole parallel with the other poles. This line dropped down the service pole 5 or 6 feet, thence at right angle and below power wires, across the road to the station and grocery. The power wires were strung about 18 to 22 feet from the ground. The.height of poles is not given. The evidence fails to show how high from the ground the telephone wire was at the point where it crossed the road.

The contact of the wires occurred in the following manner: The construction company was moving a steam shovel along the road where the service wires crossed the roadway. In some manner the boom of the steam shovel, or some appliance used to raise the wire to permit the passage of the shovel, came in contact with the wire with force enough to break the pole. The pole and the attached wire fell across the power wires. The power wires were not broken, and the proof is not clear as to whether or not a telephone wire was broken. One witness who came upon the scene later says he cut the telephone wire.

Rice was on a pole of the telephone company at 2:35 p. m., on a line running from Manchester to Burning Springs, the pole being twelve miles from Manchester. The telephone wires upon which Rice was working-carried about 90 volts, and were not wires 'which came in contact with the power wires. The voltage from the power wires could only be carried to the wires upon which Rice was working through the Manchester switchboard. The proof shows that each wire coming into the exchange was connected to a fuse before it entered the switchboard; the rack or frame holding the fuse and wires was connected with a high voltage protector, and a ground wire located at the rear of the exchange.

The operator who was in charge of the board on the day of the contact says that she heard a loud noise, and all the metal drops on the board fell, which occurs (singly) when a call comes in. There was no cessation of telephone communication, except on the lines running to the station and grocery. At the time of the contact there was no plug in the switchboard.

Rice testified that he had climbed a pole; had partly completed a splice and reached out to take hold of another wire. One wire was “across his breast,” and when he touched this one he received a shock. He says, *173 “It held, I don’t know 'right along to half a minute.” He had on his safety belt and climbing spurs. He says he was unconscious for a few minutes and did not know how he got down the pole, though he said later that he came down by means of his climbers. He walked to a point in the road where a fellow employee was working; they got in the car and Rice drove to Manchester, went to the exchange to learn what had happened, and to a physician who gave him some medicine and told him to go home and remain quiet.

Describing his condition following the shock, he said he had a swelling in his chest, pains in his back .and head; his eyes burned and his hearing was not' good. His tongue and throat were swollen and white for some time after the shock. He went to bed following the injury and there remained for about four weeks, “when he got better,” hut later has suffered some pain in his eyes and back, and his hearing was not as good as before the shock. The proof indicates that appellant drew his regular wage during the time he was laid up, and that he went back to work some time in October.

Dr. Anderson treated him following the shock. He said the “chances were” that he told him to go home and be quiet. He found Rice suffering more or less from shock, “muscular and nervous pain and headache.” He treated appellant for three or four weeks. He had pains in his chest, right arm and head; his right. eye was congested and pained him. His tongue was normal as to color, but Rice complained of it feeling “thick and numb.” Dr. Anderson had not examined Rice “for a long time.” He nowhere said that appellant was incapacitated from work, or suffering at the time of trial, two years after injury, though appellant then complained of some physical pains.

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Related

Isbell v. Union Light, Heat & Power Company
162 F. Supp. 471 (E.D. Kentucky, 1958)
Dixon v. Kentucky Utilities Co.
174 S.W.2d 19 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W.2d 760, 288 Ky. 170, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-kentucky-utilities-co-kyctapphigh-1941.