Richmond Light, Heat & Power Co. v. Rau

110 N.E. 666, 184 Ind. 117, 1915 Ind. LEXIS 148
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1915
DocketNo. 22,829
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 110 N.E. 666 (Richmond Light, Heat & Power Co. v. Rau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richmond Light, Heat & Power Co. v. Rau, 110 N.E. 666, 184 Ind. 117, 1915 Ind. LEXIS 148 (Ind. 1915).

Opinion

Morris, C. J.

Action for damages by appellee, Rau, administratrix, for death of her husband, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of appellant corporations. Appellants Richmond Light, Heat and Power Company, and Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern Traction Company, severally demurred to the complaint, and each demurrer was overruled. These rulings are here assigned as error. Appellant, city of. Richmond, filed no demurrer. Each appellant answered in general denial. Trial by jury, resulting in verdict and judgment against all appellants. The separate motion of each appellant for a new trial was overruled and each assigns as error the ruling on its motion.

The complaint alleges that for years prior to September 5, 1911, appellants city of Richmond, and Richmond Light, Heat and Power Company were each engaged in manufacturing, distributing and selling electric current for furnishing light and power to the city and inhabitants thereof, and that appellant, Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern Traction Company, during the same time, was engaged in operating an electric street railway on the streets of the city; that the city and the light company, in supplying and distributing current for lighting, used [120]*120what is known as primary and secondary electric wires, the former carrying a dangerous current of 2,200 volts, and the latter carrying a current of only 110 volts, and supplying current to residences and other places for lighting purposes; that these wires were placed on cross arms, four feet long, fixed to tops of poles about twenty-five feet high, planted at the sides of streets, and these poles were used by both appellants to carry their respective light wires; that in the operation of their' lighting plants these appellants used, in common, a row of poles in the west side of Sheridan Street; that appellant light company had placed on the outer west ends of the cross arms one of said primary wires carrying a current of 2,200 volts while eighteen inches east thereof, and west of the poles, on the same cross arms, appellant city had placed one of its secondary wires. It is further alleged that tracks of appellant traction company were laid on Sheridan Street; that it had an overhead trolley system, and its trolley wire, in said street, was supported by means of cross wires attached to the tops of the poles, on the west side of the street'; that the poles were originally planted by one of the other appellants for use in distributing electric light current, and were small, frail and .insufficient, and not adapted to supporting and carrying the trolley wire; that appellant traction company negligently attached its cross wires supporting its trolley wire, to the poles, and, because of the facts averred relating to size, condition and planting of the poles, and because of the weight of the trolley wire, and the swinging and vibration, up and down, of the trolley, when cars were in motion, said appellant negligently pulled the tops of the poles to the east, particularly one of the poles located immediately north of John Street, and thereby negligently caused said elec[121]*121trie light wires to come in contact with one another and with a taller telephone pole, standing immediately east of the line of the electric light poles, and at a point thirty feet north of the first electric light pole north of John Street, and thereby to destroy the insulation on the electric light wires in the. vicinity of the telephone pole; that on September 5, 1911, and for six months prior thereto, the appellant traction company knew that its cross wires were attached to the poles as aforesaid, and that the poles were insufficient therefor and that they were carrying the wires of the other appellants for the purposes aforesaid; that appellants city and light company each negligently permitted the destruction of insulation of their wires,- at the place, and had thereafter negligently permitted the two wires to-rub against, one another, and against the telephone pole; that all the appellants knew, before the accident to decedent, and in time to have repaired the light wires and in time to have avoided their contact with one another or with the telephone pole, that the insulation, at that point, was destroyed and that the two wires, bare of insulation, were there in contact with one another and with the telephone pole; that appellee’s decedent had no knowledge of the conditions or facts. It is further averred that on and prior to September 5, 1911, appellant city was furnishing electric light to one Martin at his residence, the current for which was transmitted over its secondary wire; that appellee’s decedent was. then and had long been, in said appellant’s employ, engaged in work on its various lines, and was ordered to inspect the lighting appliances at the Martin residence; that while so engaged, the uninsulated portions of the two wares in Sheridan Street came in contact, and immediately the 2,200 volt current from the primary wdre was conducted by the sec[122]*122ondary wire to Martin’s residence, and thence into Rau’s body, causing his instant death.

1. 2. On behalf of appellant traction company it is urged that the complaint is insufficient against it because there is no averment that it knew that either of' these wires carried .a high and dangerous voltage of electricity. The point is not well taken. It is a matter of common knowledge that, in .the, operation of modern municipal electric lighting plants, high tension wires are in common use. It is further claimed that while the complaint charges that appellant traction company negligently brought the bare electric wires in contact, it is not charged that it caused the escape of electric current from the high voltage wire to the other, “or that it caused the death of deceased”. Courts judicially know that electric current will escape from a high tension wire when brought in contact with a low tension one. The cause of decedent’s death is sufficiently averred.

3. 4. It is also contended that no facts are averred showing the right of the traction company to interfere with the wires or poles of the other appellants, in making repairs or to do anything other than to abandon the use of the pole where the danger existed or quit running its cars on the street. The complaint alleges that this appellant had been using these poles for years. Express or implied authority from the other appellants for such use must be presumed from the nature and duration of the use. The right to use the poles authorized this appellant, without becoming a trespasser, to take proper measures to remedy a dangerous condition. It is urged that there is no allegation that the death was proximately caused by any negligence of appellant traction company. Without calling at[123]*123tention to particular averments, it is sufficient to say that, in our judgment, the complaint sufficiently avers that Ora Rau’s death was proximately caused by this appellant’s negligence, concurring with that of the other two appellants. As against any objection urged we are satisfied that there was no error in overruling the separate demurrer of appellant, Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern Traction Company.

5. Appellant, Richmond Light, Heat and Power Company, claims that no sufficient act of negligence is charged against it by the complaint— that on the other hand the positive averments thereof show that the contact of the wires was caused by the affirmative and negligent act of the traction company, and over which it had no control. We can not concur in such conclusion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 N.E. 666, 184 Ind. 117, 1915 Ind. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richmond-light-heat-power-co-v-rau-ind-1915.