Richardson v. Pacific Power & Light Co.

118 P.2d 985, 11 Wash. 2d 288
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1941
DocketNo. 28419.
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 118 P.2d 985 (Richardson v. Pacific Power & Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. Pacific Power & Light Co., 118 P.2d 985, 11 Wash. 2d 288 (Wash. 1941).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

Plaintiff, as administratrix, brought this action in Walla Walla county, Washington, to recover damages for the wrongful death of her husband occasioned in Oregon and resulting from his coming in contact with a broken high tension wire which constituted a part of the power distribution system of defendant Pacific Power & Light Company, hereinafter referred to as the power company. Defendants Don Thompson and Robert Bragg were, respectively, the power foreman and the manager of the power company’s Walla Walla division. The cause was tried to a jury, except as to one issue on which, by stipulation of the parties, the evidence was taken, during the *292 course of the trial, before the court alone. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff. Defendants moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, for a new trial. The motion was denied in its entirety, and judgment was entered on the verdict. Defendants have appealed.

In their assignments of error, appellants make four contentions, which have been rearranged, for convenience of treatment, as follows: (1) That to enforce the Oregon wrongful death statute in this litigation would be against the public policy of this state; (2) that the decedent was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law; (3) that the court erred in giving any instruction on the presumption of due care; and (4) that respondent, for a valuable consideration, had previously executed a general release, thereby barring recovery in the present action.

The facts as the jury was entitled to resolve them from the evidence are as follows: At the time of his death, Frank G. Richardson was thirty-two years of age, was the possessor of an electrical engineering degree from Washington State College, and for ten or eleven years had been an electrician and lineman in the employ of Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Company, hereinafter referred to as the telephone company. Richardson was a competent, steady, reliable, industrious man, and for some time before his death had been receiving a salary of $217.50 per month. He is survived by his wife, respondent herein, and two small sons, who were four and eight years of age, respectively, at the time of the trial.

The power company, in so far as we are here concerned with its activities, was engaged in supplying electric power in a district around the city of Walla Walla and in the northeastern portion of Oregon. It maintained various power lines throughout that area, *293 one of its lines terminating at a farm in Umatilla county, Oregon, occupied by one George Chapman. It was upon this farm that Richardson met his death.

The particular power line involved in the present action approached the Chapman farm from the south and, after entering the farm, ran approximately due north to a terminal pole and thence to Chapman’s house about two hundred feet further north. Since the only part of the power line of any importance in this case is the section between this terminal pole and the pole next adjacent to it to the south, we shall denominate these two poles as the north pole and the south pole respectively. These poles were about thirty feet high and were approximately two hundred seventeen feet apart. The south pole stood on the west side of the Walla Walla river, which meandered through the farm in a generally north and south direction, while the north pole stood on the east side of the stream. The poles were strung with two copper wires carrying sixty-six hundred volts of electricity.

On the east side of the river, at a point about one hundred seventeen feet north of the south pole and about one hundred feet south of the north pole, stood a large tree, referred to in the evidence as the bridge tree because a footbridge crossing the river was anchored to it. At a point thirty-five or forty feet north, and about fifteen or twenty feet west, of the bridge tree was a group of four partly dead cottonwood trees, called snags throughout the trial to distinguish them from the live bridge tree. The wires running from the south pole to the north pole passed between the bridge tree and the four cottonwood trees, and, according to the photographs in evidence, the east wire appears actually to have passed through the branches of the bridge tree. The cottonweed trees, the nearest of which stood from six to twelve feet west of the west wire, were partly dead at the *294 top; some of the branches extended to and over the wires. Sometimes, when the wind blew, electricity would jump from the power line across to the trees.

About fifty feet north and east of the bridge tree was Chapman’s barnyard. At the southwest corner of the barnyard, which was the point nearest the bridge tree, was a gate opening onto a path which led past the tree to the footbridge. From the same comer of the barnyard, and in the area between the bridge tree and the four cottonwood snags, a wagon road ran to and beyond the river, thus passing underneath the power wires.

The telephone company, decedent’s employer, also maintained lines throughout the territory around the city of Walla Walla and in the northern part of Oregon. One of these lines crossed appellant company’s power line on the Chapman farm. Pursuant to a “contact permit” from the power company, two of the telephone company’s wires were attached to the south pole and to two other power line poles still further south. The telephone wires were fastened to brackets affixed to the poles at a point about six feet below the power wires.

Between midnight arid one o’clock on the morning of January 3, 1939, there was a severe wind storm in the region around the Chapman farm. The United States weather bureau station in Walla Walla recorded a maximum wind velocity of twenty-eight miles per hour from the west at 12:16 a. m. During this storm, a dead limb fell from one of the snags which stood west of the power line and was found the next morning lying on the ground near the edge of the wagon road. When found, the limb was broken in three pieces, the largest of which was from eight to ten feet long and from six to eight inches in diameter at the larger end. It was also discovered, later in the *295 same morning, that the east power wire had broken at a point directly above and a little west of the place where the three pieces of the dead limb were found.

After the storm, at about 4:00 a. m., Chapman milked his herd of twenty cows, using an electric milking machine, which seemed to operate as usual at that time. The lights in and around his farmhouse were also functioning then and for some time thereafter. Early in the morning, Chapman had twice forded the river a short distance north of the footbridge, at the point where the wagon road intersected the stream, but he had noticed nothing that would indicate that one of the wires was down. However, it appears from the testimony of an electrical engineer, called as an expert witness, that, even if the wire had been broken during the wind storm in the early morning hours, still if both ends of the broken wire were touching the earth, enough electricity might have passed through the ground to keep the lights and the milking machine on the Chapman farm in operation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 P.2d 985, 11 Wash. 2d 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-pacific-power-light-co-wash-1941.