Sweatman v. Los Angeles Gas & Electric Corp.

281 P. 677, 101 Cal. App. 318, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 231
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 18, 1929
DocketDocket No. 6241.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 281 P. 677 (Sweatman v. Los Angeles Gas & Electric 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
Sweatman v. Los Angeles Gas & Electric Corp., 281 P. 677, 101 Cal. App. 318, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 231 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

BURNELL, J., pro tem.

Plaintiffs, who are the surviving widow and minor children of one Robert Fulton Sweat-man, appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of respondent corporation upon the sustaining of its demurrer to the second amended complaint without leave to amend. Respondent was the sole defendant upon whom process was *319 served. The action was to recover damages for the death of Sweatman resulting from an electric shock received by him from respondent’s high-voltage wires. The facts set forth in the pleading under discussion, so far as they appear material to the points involved on this appeal, are as follows:

On the 10th' of October, 1923, a five-story reinforced concrete building was under construction at the southwest corner of East Eighth and Santee Streets, in the city of Los Angeles. Construction of this building had been begun about July 25th of the same year. Sweatman, on the day he met his death, was working on the fifth floor of this structure, and while moving a metal rod “into and out of” one of the windows, brought it into contact with an uninsulated high-voltage wire “then being, by defendants, placed, maintained, and operated, above a public sidewalk, and about seven feet away from the north side of said building.” The complaint further alleges that the work being done by Sweatman and other laborers employed in and about the building was of a character similar to that usually performed by workmen in the construction of buildings in the vicinity “where defendants maintained similarly charged wires at like distances from other concrete buildings,” and that “the probability and danger of electrical contact between such workmen and such uninsulated high-voltage electric wires were then and long before then well known to defendants, and unknown to said decedent.”

Urging that, contrary to the opinion of the learned court below as expressed by its ruling on the demurrer, the complaint set up a cause of action as against respondent, appellants make the following points:

First, that respondent was obliged so to arrange its wires as to safeguard the workmen employed in the erection of adjacent buildings under the circumstances presented in the complaint:
Second, that under such circumstances the wire in question constituted a dangerous instrumentality which was operated at the risk of respondent; and
Third, that respondent had no exclusive use of the space above the sidewalk and hence cannot avoid liability on the theory that Sweatman ‘ ‘ should not have gone there or placed the rod there.”

*320 To these contentions the respondent replies:

First, that there is no duty devolving upon an electric company to insulate electric wires suspended from poles in a public street in such a position that it could not reasonably be anticipated that persons would come in contact with them; and
Second, that it appears from the pleading itself that any danger from the location or uninsulated condition of respondent’s wire was patent to Sweatman and that, therefore, his heedlessness in making contact therewith by means of an electrical conductor constituted contributory negligence.

The question, therefore, which we are called upon to determine on this appeal has to do with the duty of one maintaining high-voltage electric wires along and over a public highway. That duty is thus defined in Fairbairn v. American River Electric Co., 170 Cal. 115 [148 Pac. 788, 789]:’ “Owing to the highly destructive power of electricity when carried in quantities sufficient for power purposes, and to the fact that it is not visible to the eye or apparent to the other senses, a person or company maintaining an electric power transmission line along, or over a public or private road, is required to exercise a high degree of care in placing the wires so as not to interfere with traffic on the ordinary highway and so as to avoid contact with and injury to any person or object which may reasonably be expected to pass under the wires. (Giraudi v. Electric Imp. Co., 107 Cal. 124 [48 Am. St. Rep. 114, 28 L. R. A. 596, 40 Pac. 108]; Perham v. Portland E. Co., 33 Or. 478 [72 Am. St. Rep. 730, 40 L. R. A. 799, 53 Pac. 14, 24]; Fitzgerald v. Edison etc. Co., 200 Pa. St. 543 [86 Am. St. Rep. 732, 50 Atl. 161] ; Crosswell on Electricity, sec. 234.) ‘The companies are not insurers of the safety of the public against all dangers arising from the lawful placing in the street of appliances pertaining to the business carried on by them, but they are bound to know the dangers which may naturally be caused by such use of the streets, and to guard against them by the exercise of all the foresight and caution which can be reasonably expected of prudent men under the circumstances. ’ (1 Joyce on Electricity, sec. 538; Denver v. Sherret, 88 Fed. 233 [31 C. C. A. 499].) ‘The degree of care required of such companies, under the rule that they *321 must exercise reasonable care, varies according to the facts and circumstances of the case, having in view the serious results which may ensue as a consequence of negligence. ’ (1 Joyce on Electricity, sec. 438a.) The standard to be attained is that of ordinary and reasonable care, and this" means such care as a reasonably careful and prudent person, having in view the dangers to be avoided and the likelihood of injury therefrom, would exercise, under the circumstances, in order to prevent injury. "Where death may be caused by an agency lawfully in use, ordinary care requires that every means known, or that with reasonable inquiry would be known, must be used to prevent it.”

In the Fairbairn case, again quoting from the opinion, “the alleged negligence of the defendant was the maintaining of a power line carrying a heavy current of electricity along a public road with the wires too close to the surface of the ground, and without covering the wires with insulating material, in consequence whereof the boom of a hay derrick which the plaintiffs and others were passing under said wires to enter said road from a lane leading into it, came into close proximity to the wires and electricity therefrom passed down the boom cable into the body of the plaintiff, causing the injuries complained of.” Reversing a judgment for the plaintiff, the Supreme Court noted that “the wires were in plain sight, the plaintiff and those with him at the time saw them, guessed at their height above ground, and were endeavoring to bring the top of the derrick boom under the wires without coming in contact with them.” The lowest of these wires was twenty-seven feet eight and three-fourths inches above the surface of the ground. The court said that the defendant could not be charged with negligence unless, under the circumstances, the placing or maintaining of its wires at that height was negligence and that it was apparent from all the facts in the case that the defendant had no reasonable cause to apprehend that the objects passing along, into or crossing the road would be high enough to come into dangerous proximity to its wires.

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Bluebook (online)
281 P. 677, 101 Cal. App. 318, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweatman-v-los-angeles-gas-electric-corp-calctapp-1929.