Sinkovich v. Bell Tel. Co. of Pa.

133 A. 629, 286 Pa. 427, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 569
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 12, 1926
DocketAppeal, 82
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 133 A. 629 (Sinkovich v. Bell Tel. Co. of Pa.) 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
Sinkovich v. Bell Tel. Co. of Pa., 133 A. 629, 286 Pa. 427, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 569 (Pa. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Schaffer,

This action was brought by plaintiff to recover damages for the death of her husband, who was killed by a bolt of lightning while standing in front of a window in their home. The trial resulted in a verdict in plaintiff’s favor. Defendant appeals and submits for our con *430 sideration, in support of the claim that judgment should be entered in its behalf, that there was no sufficient evidence to sustain the jury’s finding of negligence and no adequate proof of the causal connection between the negligence alleged and the death.

It is necessary to an understanding of the legal questions involved to depict the situation at the time of the tragedy. Defendant maintained a telephone line along a public highway in the vicinity of the house occupied by plaintiff and her husband. While a rain storm was in progress in the late afternoon of July 11, 1921, pole 105 in the line was struck and shattered by a severe bolt of lightning. A witness called by plaintiff testified that he saw the pole struck and instantly thereafter observed a light on the wire which led from it toward the house occupied by decedent. The wires which were in a twisted strand ran in a northerly direction, substantially at right angles from the pole, a distance of about 270 feet to the corner of a house designated in the testimony as No. 24. At this corner the wires divided, one set going westerly along the rear of house No. 24 and also along the rear of plaintiff’s house, designated as No. 25, and the other in a northeasterly direction to a house desig nated as No. 34. Several years before the time of the occurrence with which we are dealing, a telephone had been set up in house No. 25. No telephone had been located therein for at least five years prior to the accident, but the wires had been permitted to remain suspended along the outside of the house, which was of frame, and through its wall, being carried through in porcelain tubes with the ends of the wires exposed and hanging out of the tubing in the room in which decedent met his death.

It is the contention of defendant that this wire which passed along house 25 was not connected with the wire which ran from pole 105, but was a severed loop. We are not at this stage of the case concerned with this allegation, as there was testimony in plaintiff’s behalf that *431 the connection existed. The wire, so far as house 25 was concerned, was supported by a nail driven in the weatherboarding. The woodwork of the house where the wire came in contact with it was wet. The wire was not grounded. The wire which branched off from the corner of house 24 to house 34 was connected with a telephone in the latter. This wire was grounded by means of an arrester device composed of carbons with an air gap of 3/1000ths of an inch between them from which a wire ran to the ground. This is the usual device to protect telephones, so far as practically possible, from excess electrical currents. These carbons, when examined after the accident, indicated that no electric current had passed through them. It appeared, however, that the telephone was out of use following the storm and that at the time of the lightning stroke there was a jingle of its bell.

Decedent while the storm was in progress was in the room in house 25, where the wires protruded through the wall. He walked to a window near the wires and raised his hands toward the shade. In so doing he stood close to a metal sink from which an iron pipe ran to the ground. As he attempted to reach the shade, there was a violent flash of lightning and he fell over dead, with burns on his body showing that he had been electrocuted. The lightning did not enter the room from the exposed ends of the wires, but, if it came along the wires, jumped from them several feet before reaching the place where they entered the wall, to a point above the window, in front of which decedent was standing, tearing a hole through the woodwork of the house, through the plaster and the wallpaper. The theory of plaintiff is that the electrical current jumped from the wire where it came in contact with the wet wall, forced its way through it, jumped to decedent’s body and from it to the metal sink, whence it was grounded through the pipe leading to the earth. The insulation on the wire was not burnt or bursted, although it had deteriorated somewhat from *432 age and contact with the house and was worn. The wire itself was not melted or otherwise affected. Another wire attached to pole 105 was found, after the storm, to have melted through and broken.

Plaintiff relies for her right to recover on the fact that pole 105 was struck, that the wire ran from this pole to decedent’s house, that a light was seen on this wire following the flash of lightning, that it was negligence to have allowed this wire to remain hanging on the house after the telephone therein was removed and particularly so without grounding it. Defendant sets up that there is no sufficiently satisfying proof that the bolt of lightning which struck pole 105 is the one which killed the décedent, that his death was under all the probabilities due to a secondary lightning stroke instantaneously following the one which hit pole 105, a recognized phenomenon in electrical storms, which latter stroke hit decedent’s house direct. It is urged upon us that the mere leaving of the wire could not be declared negligent and that the failure to have it grounded where it entered the house is of no consequence in the determination we are to reach, as the electric current, if it was on the wire, jumped from it before reaching the point where the ground wire would have been placed and therefore the failure to ground is an immaterial matter.

Starting then with the admitted fact that pole 105 was struck, we have as the next link of the chain of proof that the witness Rasemus said he saw a light on the wire leading from the pole to decedent’s house. He testified that he saw light on the pole when it was struck as well as on the wire leading to decedent’s house; that the light was like a blaze, a fire when it hit the pole and was on the wire for a distance of about six feet from the pole. These facts coupled with that of the death by electrocution are the ones upon which appellee relies to connect the lightning stroke with the death and are sought to be supplemented by the testimony of “experts” to establish defendant’s liability therefor. One *433 of these witnesses, F. J. Thompson, conld not he so denominated by the greatest straining of the term expert witness and yet appellee places much reliance upon him. He described his business as “real estate and electric” and his experience as “electric wiring, outside transmissions, some telephone, power house,” gained while employed by two electric companies, and in the electric supply business on his own account. He said he was familiar with electric currents and electric construction but did not know the voltage' used on telephone circuits. He defined high electric currents as “anything that will knock you down,” “sométhing that you can’t handle by your hands.” He knew that electricity seeks the ground. He did not know whether electric currents of high voltage will pass through porcelain insulators. His attention being directed to lightning, his thought was “lightning you can’t handle I don’t think.” Asked as to the kind of conductor that the human body is, he replied he could not tell.

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Bluebook (online)
133 A. 629, 286 Pa. 427, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sinkovich-v-bell-tel-co-of-pa-pa-1926.