Royal Indemnity Co. v. Midland Counties Public Service Corp.

183 P. 960, 42 Cal. App. 628
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 12, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2772.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 183 P. 960 (Royal Indemnity Co. v. Midland Counties Public Service Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Royal Indemnity Co. v. Midland Counties Public Service Corp., 183 P. 960, 42 Cal. App. 628 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

LANGDON, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered on a verdict of a jury in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of thirteen thousand dollars. The plaintiff claims to be subrogated to the rights of one A. J. Bellah to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been received by him by 'reason of the negligence of the defendant. The injured man was a farm-hand and was in the employ of one Max Flentge at the time of the accident. It is claimed by the plaintiff that the employer and employee were within the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act and that the plaintiff was the insurance carrier of the employer and paid the ¿I aim of the employee and in consequence succeeded to his rights against the defendant.

*631 The facts of the case, in so far as they involve the merits, are as follows: The defendant was a public service corporation engaged in the business of generating and transmitting electricity in the county of Fresno and elsewhere. It had a line of poles running along the county highway into the town of Coalinga, on which poles ran the high-power lines of the company. The pole involved here was situated on the land leased and cultivated by the employer and along the line of the county road about eight or ten feet inside the line. It was guyed by wires running from a point near the top of the pole to the ground on either side. Some of the wires on this pole were dead, but the lower wires, with which we are concerned here, were carrying a load of ten thousand volts of electricity. The guy wires were insulated at a point where, had they broken near the ground and fallen in a perpendicular line from the top of the pole, the insulation would have been below the lowest live wire and the electricity could not have traveled down their length to the injury of anyone upon the ground. On the day of the accident A. H. Bellah, the injured man, was working in company with another man, Wagner, in mowing around the edge of a field of barley. He had a team of horses, as also had his companion. Desiring to eat their luncheon at the place where they found themselves at the noon hour, they unhitched their horses and allowed them to graze, and retired themselves to the shade of the wagon to rest. One of Bellah’s horses was a “snorting” colt, and he hitched it to an older horse. The older horse in some way got astraddle of the guy wire of the defendant. Bellah attempted to back it off of the wire. There is conflicting testimony regarding the amount of strain put upon the wire by the horse during Bellah’s attempt to release it. One witness testified that the horse was plunging and kicking, but Bellah testified that he was not plunging. But, at any rate, while Bellah was attempting to push and hack the horse off of the wire, and had placed the bit in its mouth and was holding on to the ring thereof, several of the strands of the guy wire became detached from the top of the pole, causing the guy wire to sag and come in contact with a live wire at a point below the insulation; the electricity was conveyed down the guy wire into the body of the horse, which was killed by the shock, and Bellah, who was holding on to the bit, received a severe shock, which *632 threw him violently to the ground, and as a result he has sustained very serious and permanent injuries. It appears that when the strands in the guy wires became loosened and it sagged against the live wire, said gmy wire remained at approximately the same angle from the pole as it had been originally placed, and the insulation was not, while it was held at such an angle, below the lowest live wire. The plaintiff insists that a breakage or pulling loose of the strands of the guy wire where it was attached to the pole should have been anticipated by the defendant, and that it was its duty to have so insulated the guy wire that under any conditions which would cause a sagging of the wire, the insulation would nevertheless be at a point below a place of possible contact with the live wires. Appellant argues that there is no absolute duty upon defendant to insulate its guy wires in any particular manner, but that it is possible for the guy wires to be made so strong and to be placed so firmly in their position at a safe distance from the live wires that insulation would be unnecessary; in other words, that the relative positions of the wires themselves may furnish insulation by means of the intervening air. This is tacitly admitted by the respondent, who contends, however, that whether in the particular case the porcelain insulation was necessary and its absence negligence was a question of fact which Avas submitted to the jury under proper instructions, and that the jury has found by its verdict that the defendant was guilty of negligence in not insulating the guy wires at a point below the live wires in the same manner in which said guy wire was insulated at a point above the lowest live wire. Our conclusion is in agreement with this contention of the appellant. [1] The duty of the appellant was not an absolute duty to insulate or make the wires safe in any particular manner. Its duty was to make the wires safe under all the exigencies offered by the surrounding circumstances. The strands of the guy wire were obviously either insufficient in strength or insufficiently attached to the pole to retain the guy wire at the proper angle from the live wires under the circumstances presented. Perhaps it was impracticable to make them sufficiently strong or sufficiently securely attached, but, if so, then appellant should have guarded against their breakage. Appellant realized this duty in guarding against breakage at the bottom, and yet it *633 is apparent that the wire gave way more easily at the top than at the bottom when subjected to pressure from the bottom, the point at which it would seem most likely that pressure would be exerted. It, therefore, appears that this possibility should also have been anticipated and guarded against. [2] True, in reaching this conclusion the jury should take into consideration the nature of the country in which the pole was situated, the occupations of the persons living thereabouts, the usual precautions taken by electric companies under similar circumstances, and such matters. (Fairbairn v. American River Electric Co., 170 Cal. 115, [148 Pac. 788].) [3] The jury was instructed, however, in a manner which we think covered this matter. It was instructed at the request of defendant that the owner or operator of an electric plant is not an insurer against injury to other persons; that it has done all the law requires it to do if it has exercised the care in the matter of the construction and maintenance, operation, and inspection of its plant necessary so that the same will not be a source of danger or injury to persons lawfully in the pursuit of their business or pleasure, and that the care which the law exacts from any corporation engaged in operating such an instrumentality is always in proportion to the degree of danger reasonably to be apprehended from the use of the means employed. The jury has followed this instruction, we must presume, and has found that the danger of these strands breaking above or becoming detached from the pole was a danger reasonably to be apprehended. The jury had before them the testimony of Rudolph W.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McDonald v. Plumb
12 Cal. App. 3d 374 (California Court of Appeal, 1970)
Hercules Powder Company v. DiSabatino
188 A.2d 529 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1963)
Olson v. Cass County Electric Co-Operative, Inc.
94 N.W.2d 506 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1959)
Gibson v. Garcia
216 P.2d 119 (California Court of Appeal, 1950)
Bunch v. Eason
214 P.2d 28 (California Court of Appeal, 1950)
Lozano v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co.
161 P.2d 74 (California Court of Appeal, 1945)
Polk v. City of Los Angeles
159 P.2d 931 (California Supreme Court, 1945)
Jackson v. Utica Light & Power Co.
149 P.2d 748 (California Court of Appeal, 1944)
Springer v. Sodestrom
129 P.2d 499 (California Court of Appeal, 1942)
Inglewood Park Mausoleum Co. v. Ferguson
49 P.2d 305 (California Court of Appeal, 1935)
Lacy v. Pacific Gas Electric Co.
29 P.2d 781 (California Supreme Court, 1934)
Newman v. Steuernagel
22 P.2d 780 (California Court of Appeal, 1933)
Katz v. Helbing
10 P.2d 1001 (California Supreme Court, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 P. 960, 42 Cal. App. 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royal-indemnity-co-v-midland-counties-public-service-corp-calctapp-1919.