Union Light, Heat & Power Co. v. Lunsford

225 S.W. 741, 189 Ky. 785, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 514
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 3, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 225 S.W. 741 (Union Light, Heat & Power Co. v. Lunsford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Light, Heat & Power Co. v. Lunsford, 225 S.W. 741, 189 Ky. 785, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 514 (Ky. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Carroll

Affirming.

This suit was brought in the Kenton circuit court by Lucius Lunsford, an infant between fourteen and fifteen years old, suing by his next friend, against appellant,' Union Light, Heat and Power Company, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by Lucius when his hand came in contact with a heavily charged electric wire used by the power company in the conduct of its business.

On a trial before a jury he recovered damages in the sum of $3,000.00, and the power company has prosecuted this appeal, asking a reversal upon two grounds, first, that the jury should have been directed by the trial judge to return a verdict for it, and, second, because'of alleged error in the instruction defining the degree of care that must be exercised by the power company.

The facts of the case are substantially these: The power company owns a vacant lot of considerable size situated in a populous part of the city of Olovington. This lot is bounded on the west by the buildings of the Advance Mill Company that front on Garrard street, on the south by Saratoga alley, on the east by Licking river and on the west by Eighth street.

Eighth street is unimproved and for many years had been used by the boys and children in the neighborhood [786]*786as a playground. On the property line of the power company’s lot abutting on this street there was at the time of the accident a plank fence, but some of the planks in this fence had been torn or knocked down, leaving spaces in the fence through which boys might go from Eighth street into the lot. There was also an opening in this fence for a gate through which boys could go at their pleasure into the lot. The side of the lot fronting on Saratoga alley was not inclosed by a fence, and of course boys and children could go when they wanted to from the alley into the lot.

There is also abundant evidence, to show that almost every day a crowd of boys came from Saratoga alley or Eighth street into this lot for the purpose of playing the different- games and indulging in the various things that idle boys like to do. There was little if any effort on the part of the employes of the power company who occupied a building on this lot on Saratoga alley to interfere with the boys in their use of the lot as a playground, although it should be said that occasionally boys, and especially those of tender years, would be ordered out of the lot by these employes. There was not, however, any continuing or persistent or vigorous effort made to keep the boys out of or from playing in and about the lot although the superintendent and others, of its employes were so located in the buildings of the company-that they knew the boys used the lot every,day.

• The lot was also made especially attractive to boys by the presence of a large-pit some twenty or thirty feet from the buildings of the Advance Mill Company. This pit had at one time been used as a gas tank and was about sixty feet in diameter and probably twenty feet deep. Water stood in it to the depth of several feet and in this water were frogs and turtles; old electric light bulbs that floated- on -the water were also thrown into it, and many of the boys made it a practice of standing around the pit and with gum shooters or flippers shooting at the glass bulbs, frogs and turtles. How attractive a place this would be to boys any person at all familiar with their tastes, desires and habits can easily understand. Indeed if the power company had established a place of amusement for children it could hardly have equipped it with more enticing objects than those to be found in this pit.

About ten feet from the edge of this pit nearest to the building of the Advance Mill Company and in the [787]*787corner of the lot joining this building and Saratoga alley the power company had its transformers, which were used to convert high tension electric power into low tension for the use of the Advance Mill Company plant. The heavily charged electric wires that run into these transformers carried more than 2,000 voltage, and these deadly wires were strung as they approached the transformers about three feet above the level of the ground.

The small plat of ground occupied by the transformers was inclosed by a close fence made of boards about eight feet high and twelve inches wide. This wide fence had been there a number of years and some of the planks had decayed and come loose from the strips to which they were, nailed, one of these strips being about three feet from the level of the ground and about even with the wires before mentioned. The evidence shows that at least two and probably more months before the accident in question one of these planks nearest to the pit had come loose and fallen to the ground, leaving an opening into the space where the transformers were of about twelve inches in width, extending from the top of the fence to the ground.

On the clay in question Lucius and other boys were playing in this lot, and while he was shooting at the frogs with his flipper or gum shooter one of the frogs jumped out of the pit and made its way into the inclosure where the transformers were. Lucius had shot at this frog two ora three times before the frog got inside of the transformer fence, and when it had, jumped inside the fence he went to the open space where the plank had fallen off and not thinking of or appreciating the danger reached inside with his hands and arms for the purpose of again shooting at the frog. When he did this his left hand came in contact with one of the heavily charged wires, from which the protective covering had either rotted or worn off, leaving the naked wire exposed, and as a result he sustained the severe and permanent injury to recover damages for which this suit ' was brought.

It should also be said that no notice or warning had ever been given to Lucius or any of the boys of the dangerous implements or appliances in this inclosure, and it does not appear that previous to this time any of the boys had ever been hurt by coming °in contact with the wires. Nor is it shown that Lucius appreciated or understood the danger of coming in contact with these [788]*788wires. He probably knew, as most boys of Ms age living in a city would, that a heavily charged electric wire would be a dangerous thing for him to touch or handle or come in contact with, but mere boyish knowledge of a danger like this will not be counted such contributory negligence on Ms part as would defeat an action for damages on account of injuries sustained if, by accident or while engaged in some youthful pleasure or amusement, he should be injured by it.

The power company, however, knew how dangerous was the place where these transformers and wires were, and the necessity for keeping it well protected; it also knew or will be charged with notice that the plank had ' fallen down, because it had been off two months or more and its employes were about the lot every day and so close to the inclosure that they could not well escape observing the opening.

On these facts the argument is made for the power company that Lucius, in the first place, was a trespasser on the premises of the power company, and, in the second place, as he was not injured by falling into the pit or coming in contact with anything immediately connect- • ed with it, and this was the only thing about the place that could be called an attractive nuisance, there could be no liability on the part of the power company.

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Bluebook (online)
225 S.W. 741, 189 Ky. 785, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-light-heat-power-co-v-lunsford-kyctapp-1920.