State Ex Rel. Bahner v. Consolidated Gas Electric Light & Power Co.

150 A. 452, 159 Md. 138
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 5, 1930
Docket[No. 44, January Term, 1930.]
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 150 A. 452 (State Ex Rel. Bahner v. Consolidated Gas Electric Light & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Bahner v. Consolidated Gas Electric Light & Power Co., 150 A. 452, 159 Md. 138 (Md. 1930).

Opinion

Sloan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought in the name of the State for the use of the widow and minor children of Joseph A. Bahner, on the charge that he came to his death from electrocution caused by the negligence of the defendant (appellee), and from a judgment on a directed verdict for the defendant the appeal is taken.

The deceased, a young man of twenty-two, with his wife and their two boys, resided at Dundalk in Baltimore County, in a bungalow located on a lot fronting thirty-five feet on New Pittsburg Avenue and running eastward seventy feet along Ninth Avenue to Maxwell Avenue. There was a pole at the corner of Maxwell and Ninth Avenues from which two electric wires ran diagonally across the lot about twenty-eight feet above the ground and eight or ten feet above the house to an arc light on New Pittsburg Avenue located directly in front of the house.

Eight feet in the rear of the house was a sycamore tree, the branches of which spread over the rear of the house and eastwardly to the pole at Maxwell Avenue. According to the evidence, the light wires ran through the branches on the southerly side of the tree, the tree having been trimmed to lot the wires through. The deceased, with his family, had occupied the house only three weeks. It belonged to his mother, Mrs. Mamie Martin, who, for several years, had *140 lived in the next house to the north. A few days before his death the deceased had installed a radio in his house, for which he had an aerial in the tree at a height of two or three feet above the house.

On the afternoon of February 18th, 1925, about five o’clock, the deceased was near the tree in the rear of his house, and his mother went over to the son’s, where she saw him with a roll of wire in his hand. She asked what he was doing, and he told her he was going to erect a higher aerial. He had nailed a strip of wood on the tree, to which the new aerial was to be attached, two or three feet higher than the one already there, to which the first aerial was attached. She passed into the house and in a few minutes her daughter-in-law went into the yard and found her husband lying dead on the ground, about midway between the tree and the pole at the corner of Maxwell and Ninth Avenues, with the wire in both hands. Mrs. Bahner tried to release his hands and was severely shocked herself.

When Mr. Bahner was found he had both hands on the coil of wire which his mother saw before the accident; the wire was across the electric wires at the pole, and on the end of the wire was an iron or steel wedge which had been attached. Whether he attempted to throw the wedge over the wooden strip on the tree, as the mother thought and the appellee contends, or over the electric wire to be attached to an object on the other side of Ninth Avenue, no one can tell, as no one saw the deceased in the act of throwing the wedge. The theory of the defense was that he intended to attach the wire to a tree on the opposite side of Ninth Avenue. The facts can only be judged from the situation as it appeared after the accident, and then the wire was lying across the light wires “an inch or two from the insulator” on top' of the pole at Ninth Avenue and Maxwell, “over to the branches of the tree. It hung over the branches right straight down to Mr. Bahner.” To the other end the wedge was attached. The accident was in February, when there was no foliage on the tree. There was evidence that, near the insulator which the *141 eJectric and aerial wires crossed, and at a point about eighteen feet from the pole at Maxwell Avenue, the insulation on the electric wire was ragged, and about eight feet nearer the tree the copper wire was exposed.

This court has not gone so far as to say that the mere fact of uninsulated wires and the happening of an accident create a situation from which a presumption of negligence arises. The duty of the defendant, as stated by this court in Cumberland v. Lottig, 95 Md. 42, 47, is, “that outside of any contractual relations between the parties to the suit the very nature of the business conducted by the electric company imposed upon it a legal duty to see that its wires when strung where persons were liable to come in contact with them were properly placed and insulated with reference to the safety of such persons.” Brown v. Edison Electric Co., 90 Md. 400, 406; Grube v. Baltimore, 132 Md. 355, 359; 9 R. C. L. 1213; 20 C. J. 355.

The appellant cited, as authority, Western Union Tel. Co. v. State, use of Nelson, 82 Md. 293; Brown v. Edison Electric Co., 90 Md. 400; Ziehm v. United Elec. Lt. & Pow. Co., 104 Md. 48; Walter v. Baltimore Electric Co., 109 Md. 513, 524; Hagerstown & Frederick Rwy. Co. v. State, use of Weaver, 139 Md. 507, and Annapolis Power Co. v. State, use of Smith, 152 Md. 241. In all of those cases the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur was applied. In each of them the party injured or killed was in a place where he or any other person so engaged might reasonably be expected to be at the time of injury, and the negligence of the defendant was thus presumed.

The appellant offered some evidence of instances' when sparks had been seen on the tree in the yard due to the swaying of the wires and the tree. One witness testified that “any day there was a storm or heavy wind or weather you could see fire flying from limb to limb where they rubbed against the limb.” If there had been evidence of any such condition at the time of the accident, and that the current was transmitted to the tree, and that by reason of his contact with the tree Mr. Bahner was electrocuted, the burden would *142 then have been on the appellee, and the doctrine of implied negligence would have been applicable. But in this case, as in so many cases of electrocution, there were no witnesses to the accident; the evidence is wholly circumstantial, and the • inferences to be drawn must be from the conditions as found at the time.

The deceased in this case was found with a wire in his hands which was lying across the appellee’s electric wires, with a wedge on the other end of the wire, intended for an aerial, which could have been attached to-it for no other purpose than to propel it through the air and carry it across appellee’s wires. If the deceased knew anything, he must have known that contact of the aerial with the electric wire might have conducted the current from the electric wires through the aerial to any person or object the latter may have touched. The thing is so self-evident that it excludes every other theory as to how the accident did happen. As said in State, use of Bell, v. Eastern Shore Gas & Electric Co., 155 Md. 660, 664, “The failure of the decedent to observe ordinary care for his protection from a danger with which he must have long been familiar is clearly shown by thq uncontradicted evidence in the record. It is a decisive fact which must be given its legitimate effect as against the recovery sought in this action.” Pollock on Torts (9th Eng. Ed.), 182. In Cumberland v. Lottig, 95 Md.

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Bluebook (online)
150 A. 452, 159 Md. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-bahner-v-consolidated-gas-electric-light-power-co-md-1930.