Rocap v. Bell Telephone Co.

79 A. 769, 230 Pa. 597, 1911 Pa. LEXIS 655
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 20, 1911
DocketAppeal, No. 139
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 79 A. 769 (Rocap v. Bell Telephone 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
Rocap v. Bell Telephone Co., 79 A. 769, 230 Pa. 597, 1911 Pa. LEXIS 655 (Pa. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Mestkezat,

The plaintiff is a newspaper reporter, and on the afternoon of June 21, 1906, went to the Philadelphia Country [599]*599Club to report a polo match and remained to dinner that evening. About half past eight o’.clock he left the dining room and went to the telephone booth in the building to communicate with his paper. The telephone was installed at the clubhouse by the defendant company. As the plaintiff took the receiver from the hook and asked for the desired number, he received a shock and was severely injured. Alleging that his injuries were caused by the defendant’s negligence, he brought this action to recover damages. The trial of the cause resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. The defendant has appealed, and assigns for error the refusal of its motion for judgment non obstante veredicto.

It is averred in the statement, as the cause of action, that it was the duty of the defendant as the owner and operator of the telephone pay station at the Country Club to have the same properly equipped and protected so as to prevent injury to persons using it, and that “the defendant neglected to properly equip and operate its pay-station at the said Philadelphia Country Club, and so negligently maintained and operated the same, that on the twenty-first day of June, 1906, the plaintiff while using the telephone at the public pay-station above referred to, ... . received a severe electrical shock rendering him unconscious,” etc.

There were two witnesses called by the plaintiff, himself and Dr. Francis D. Patterson. In describing the accident the plaintiff testified that he went to the telephone booth, took the receiver off the hook and asked for his number, “and instantly there was a heavy shock. I saw a flash of electricity and bolt of fire in front of my face, and the next thing I remembered is the next afternoon my daughter sitting by my bedside in the Howard Hospital. . . . That was the first time I had regained my consciousness.” As to the condition of the weather on the day of the accident, the witness says it looked threatening that afternoon and there was rumbling of thunder all the latter part of the afternoon, that he was [600]*600inside the clubhouse, “was not paying much attention to the surrounding elements,” and did not know until the next day that a thunderstorm was going on at the time he went to the telephone.

Dr. Patterson testified that he was at the clubhouse that afternoon, and that it started to rain very hard early in the afternoon and there were distant flashes of lightning and thunder between half past five and six o’clock. He says that later he was sitting at dinner on a covered' veranda when a heavy storm came up, “I judge it was-about quarter after or twenty minutes after eight, suddenly there was a frightful, blinding flash of lightning— so much so that the people sitting at the same table with me all jumped up under the impression that the clubhouse had been struck, and just as we started to go indoors, somebody came running out and said a man had been struck by lightning, and I went in right away and found Mr. Rocap lying on the floor and I then examined him and found that his condition was apparently very serious. . . . He was exactly like a man who had suffered concussion of the brain. . . . He was lying some twenty or twenty-five, feet from the telephone booth just where he had fallen. . . . There was a blinding flash of-light and the people at the tables, everybody on this veranda, forty or fifty people, jumped up and thought the clubhouse was struck. Q. And that was followed by a clap of thunder? A. Followed instantly — there didn’t seem to be an appreciable space between the light and the thunder. Q. Were these such marks as would indicate that any of the current passed through him? A. The one on the front of the forehead was undoubtedly a bruise where he fell. What the one back of the ear was I am not prepared to state. It might have been an electric burn. It was due to a suffusion of blood. It might have come from a very severe bruise when he fell; I am not prepared to say that.”

The testimony of the plaintiff, it will be observed, was confined to showing the accident, the condition of the [601]*601weather at the time he received his injuries, and, in rebuttal, that there was no sign on the telephone warning persons against using it during thunderstorms. The defendant company claimed that it had placed an instrument or device on the telephone at the clubhouse to prevent the discharge of electric currents during an electric storm into the telephone, and produced several witnesses having experience and technical knowledge who described the device and testified that it was a standard protection device and was at the time of the accident the best in general use and the most efficient known to the scientific world for protecting a telephone from outside or abnormal electrical disturbances, such as are due to lightning or to the telephone wire coming in contact with high voltage circuits. The witnesses, however, concurred in saying that there was no known device which would absolutely prevent lightning discharges into a telephone. It also appeared by uncontradicted evidence that the protection device on the telephone at the clubhouse was in proper working condition and had actually operated at the time of the accident.

The official records of the weather bureau at Philadelphia and the testimony of the observer in charge of the bureau show that there was a thunderstorm at Philadelphia during the evening of June 21, 1906, from 8:10 to 10:15 o’clock; and other testimony disclosed the fact that the storm was very severe and had put many telephones out of service.

This, like any other case, must be considered and decided on the facts admitted or proved in the trial court. We have referred to the material evidence produced by both parties. The credibility of the witnesses was not impugned and the evidence was entirely uncontroverted. The facts, therefore, are not in dispute. We are all of opinion that the learned trial judge erred in not giving binding instructions in favor of the defendant, and subsequently in not entering judgment for the defendant not" withstanding the verdict.

[602]*602The basis of the plaintiff’s, action is negligence, and, as disclosed by the statement, it consists in the failure of the defendant company to properly equip, operate, maintain and protect its pay station at the clubhouse resulting in the plaintiff’s injuries. It was incumbent on the plaintiff on the trial of the cause to establish the negligence averred in the statement before he was entitled to recover. His counsel now contend in support of the judgment entered in his favor by the court below that the maxim res ipsa loquitur applies, that the plaintiff made out a prima facie, case and the defendant failed to offer any evidence which shifted the burden of proof, and that the defendant company’s failure to .place a warning on the telephone against its use during electrical storms was evidence tending to establish the company’s negligence.

The maxim res ipsa loquitur does "not apply to the facts of the case as disclosed by the. plaintiff’s evidence. We are not required to determine whether the maxim would have applied had the plaintiff’s evidence concluded by showing simply the accident, that he had approached the telephone, took the receiver and instantly received the electric shock which caused his injuries.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 A. 769, 230 Pa. 597, 1911 Pa. LEXIS 655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rocap-v-bell-telephone-co-pa-1911.