Twist v. City of Rochester

37 A.D. 307, 55 N.Y.S. 850
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 37 A.D. 307 (Twist v. City of Rochester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Twist v. City of Rochester, 37 A.D. 307, 55 N.Y.S. 850 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Ward, J.:

The city of Rochester on the 1st day of July, 1887, entered into a contract in writing with the Rochester Electric Light Company of that city, a domestic corporation which will he referred to as the “ company,” whereby the company agreed to furnish, from time to time, poles suitable for supporting its electric lamps for street lighting in the city and poles or underground conduits for its wires for transmitting electricity for such lamps at such place or places and in such numbers as the city by its common council should, from time to time during the continuance of the contract, direct; to keep the poles properly painted and to set and from time to time as might be required to change the same at its own expense under the direction of the common council and in such place or places as the common council should direct, and keep in first-class condition said lamps and all appurtenances thereto or connected with the same.

And the contract further provided as follows: The said party of the first part (the company) shall also place and at all times maintain in a good condition a suitable cross arm on each pole erected and placed by it as aforesaid at the top thereof or at such other location as may be agreed upon by the party of the first part and said common council, or in case of an underground conduit or conduits, there shall be at all times kept in a good condition a suitable space therein, and said party of the first part shall grant to the party of the second part, and its agents, the exclusive use of said cross-arm or space aforesaid free of charge at any and all times during the period thereof (the existence of the contract) for any and all municipal purposes,’, and the placing of any and all telegraph or other electric wires owned or used by it, other than for lighting and power.

“ The said party of the first part shall also, upon the requirement of the common council, immediately remove any and all of its poles [311]*311after its or their use have been discontinued for three consecutive: months.”

The contract further provided that the common council should at-all times freely inspect the works, plants, dynamos, lamps, wire and. all apparatus connected therewith of the company, and the quality and condition of the wire and lamps used in and about the furnishing of such lights.

The city further agreed to take and use during the continuance of the contract at least 100 electric lights zxiápay for the sa/m.e at a rate fixed, the contract to terminate on the 1st day of July, 1892..

Pursuant to this contract, and in the year 1888, the company-erected poles along and on both sides of Mount Hope avenue, one of the most prominent streets in the city, which runs substantially north and south and near the east bank of the Genesee river and nearly parallel with a water channel called the “ feeder,” the avenue intersecting Englewood avenue (known in the case as “ Sanford street”) and Cypress street, they being on the east side of the avenue, and between these two streets occurred the death of the-plaintiffs intestate from a charge of electricity on the evening of July 15, 1892. The east bank of the feeder in the vicinity of these-intersecting streets was about 100 feet from the west side of Mount-Hope avenue. The poles erected by the electric light company were about 40 feet high. One of these poles was on the east side-of the avenue at the corner of Sanford street. Diagonally across and on the west side of the avenue was another pole nearly opposite to a structure known as the “ Clmrcli Home.” On the east side of the avenue, and further south and opposite of the premises of one J. L. Pauckner, another pole was located. On the west side of the avenue, and still further south diagonally from the last-named pole, stood a pole opposite Cypress street. The direct distance from the first to the last-named pole was about 400 feet, and the distance along the diagonal line was about 443 feet.

Prior to 1890 the Rochester City and Brighton Railway Company-had operated a street surface railroad by means of horses through Mount Hope avenue. This railroad, in March, 1890, was leased to-the. defendant the Rochester Railway Company, with all its franchises and property. In the spring of 1890, upon application, made to the common council of the city, that body granted. [312]*312leave, by resolution, to the Rochester Railway Company to construct its line in the avenue, and an agreement was entered into between it and the city to change the motive power of said street railway from horses to electricity, and the Rochester Railway Company equipped its road and began its operations by the trolley system through Mount Hope avenue. It was provided that the work must be satisfactory to the proper city authorities, and when they required it the company should place guard wires to prevent the trolley wire from coming in contact, by reason of accidental breakage or otherwise, with electric, telephone or other wires; that the company should cause to be maintained sufficient electric current through the guard wires to ring a bell at the central station in the event of any wire falling or coining in contact with the guard wire, and the proper city authorities should have general charge and supervision of the kind and quality of poles to be erected, the location of the same, and the work of construction of the railway company. The railway company constructed two tracks through Mount Hope avenue with poles eighteen feet high and wires for electric currents in the street, the line of said poles passing under the diagonal lines to which we have referred. After the construction of the electric and trolley lines, and in June, 1890, there was constructed upon the poles of the electric light company, through the agency of the city, a line of wires called the “ Patrol Line.” These wires were placed upon the poles about three feet above the electric wires at the place reserved by the city for wires under the contract. There were no guard wires or tree supports constructed in connection with this patrol wire. The only fastenings were the fastenings to the insulators. The patrol wires were bare copper, Ho. 12 wires. The electric company wires were Ho. 4 electric light wires, with, as the proof tended to show, defective insulation. The trolley wires were bare Ho. 4 copper wires. On both sides of the avenue were trees of considerable size at short distances apart, the limbs of which projected into the street in the space between Sanford and Cypress streets, which interfered to a considerable extent with the electric light and patrol line. For a long time prior to the accident, and the proof seems to indicate that for more than a year, the city had abandoned the patrol line through Mount Hope avenue, along the place of the accident, but left the wires unused, at times disconnected and broken, [313]*313and were using a line along the east bank of the feeder, but connecting with the avenue further south. The patrol wire along or near the place of the accident on several occasions dropped into the street. On one occasion a horse was killed by the electric current from the fallen wire. At one time a wire fell down in front of William Pauckner’s place, who had a store upon the corner of the avenue and Cypress street, which came down first about sixteen months before the accident, when the horse was killed; it came down again a few weeks before the accident, and the last time it fell Mr. Pauckner took it out of the way, burning 100 feet of it off, which he kept. The city never constructed another wire in the place of the one removed.

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Bluebook (online)
37 A.D. 307, 55 N.Y.S. 850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/twist-v-city-of-rochester-nyappdiv-1899.