Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. Carolina Peanut Co. Virginia Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Carolina Peanut Co.

186 F.2d 816, 32 A.L.R. 2d 234, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 3671
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 3, 1951
Docket6182, 6183
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 186 F.2d 816 (Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. Carolina Peanut Co. Virginia Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Carolina Peanut Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. Carolina Peanut Co. Virginia Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Carolina Peanut Co., 186 F.2d 816, 32 A.L.R. 2d 234, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 3671 (4th Cir. 1951).

Opinion

PARKER, Chief Judge.

These are appeals from the judgment in a case brought against the Virginia Electric Power Co. to recover damages for negligently causing the destruction by fire of the plant of the Carolina Peanut Company at Powellsville, North Carolina. The case was tried before a jury which found the defendant guilty of negligence in failing, after notice, to shut off the flow of electric current to the Peanut Company’s building, thereby causing the building and its contents to be destroyed by fire, and fixed the value of the property so- destroyed at $145,000 for the building, $30,000 for the machinery and equipment and $65,-000 for other property. Whether there was sufficient evidence to take the case to the jury in support of this finding or whether verdict should have been directed for the defendant is the question presented by the appeal in No. 6182.

The action to recover damages for the destruction of the property was instituted by the Peanut Company in a North Carolina state court and was removed into the court below by the defendant. After the removal was accomplished, defendant moved that the insurance companies which had paid insurance on the property, other than the Virginia Fire and Marine Insurance Company, be brought into the case as parties plaintiff, as they were the real parties in interest in the suit. The Virginia company, which had issued a policy covering machinery and equipment was not brought in, evidently because it was feared that impleading it might defeat the court’s jurisdiction. The motion was allowed; and the judgment eventually entered in the case was in favor of the Peanut Company and the insurance companies so impleaded. The total of the judgments rendered in favor of the companies which had insured the machinery and equipment was for the amount of the verdict less the proportionate share therein of the Virginia company, which had not been allowed to intervene. Prior to the trial of the cause, the Virginia company moved to be allowed to intervene but its motion was denied. After the verdict of the jury fixing the value of the property destroyed by fire, it again moved that it be allowed to intervene and that judgment be entered in its behalf for its proportionate part of the liability for the destruction of the machinery and equipment as fixed by the jury’s verdict; but this motion was also denied. The appeal in No. 6183 presents the question as to whether the Virginia company should have been allowed to intervene and have judgment on the verdict.

When the evidence is considered in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, it is clearly sufficient to sustain the action of the trial judge in submitting the case to the jury on the question as to the destruction of the property by fire as the result of defendant’s negligence. There was evidence that electric current was supplied to the Peanut Company by the defendant; that, on the night of the fire, electricity was observed arcing on the wires in a dangerous manner causing flashes of fire in close proximity to the building; that these flashes of fire were observed by persons in the neighborhood, who were alarmed thereby and telephoned to defendant’s manager at Ahoskie informing him of the dangerous situation that existed and asking that 'the electric current be cut off at once; that, instead of acting promptly to cut off the current upon receipt of this information, the manager telephoned to an assistant to investigate the situation; and that in the meantime the building caught on fire from the arcing electric current -and was destroyed. There is evidence that the notice given the manager as to the existing danger was most urgent, that he was warned that if he waited to send to investigate it would be too late for effective action and that, if he had acted promptly and had had the *819 current cut off at once upon receiving this information, the burning of the building would have been avoided. While there was evidence in the case from which contrary conclusions could be drawn, we cannot consider it; for it is elementary that, in passing on the motion for directed verdict we must consider the evidence in the- light most favorable to the party against whom the direction is asked and must draw from the evidence every inference in his favor that can reasonably be drawn. When this rule is applied, there can be no question as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. The principles of law governing the case were well stated in the instruction which was given in Fleming v. Carolina Power & Light Co., 232 N.C. 457, 61 S.E.2d 364, 367, as follows: “In respect to that issue the court instructs you that if the plaintiff has satisfied you by the greater weight of the evidence that the employees of the defendant Power Company, or any of them, whose duties required them to act in emergencies, had notice that the secondary wires leading from the transformers on Montgomery Street west, and serving the plaintiff’s warehouse, were arcing and flashing light and giving other indications that they were overcharged with electricity, and has further satisfied you -by the greater weight of the evidence that such condition was a dangerous one, and was such as to call for quick action on the part of said employees, or any of them, and was of such character as to demand that the said employees, or any of them, in the exercise of the degree of care which the circumstances required should cut off, or cause to be cut off, the current flowing through said wires, and that said employees, or any of them, failed to cut off or cause to be cut off the said current, and that their failure so to do was the proximate cause of the fire that destroyed plaintiff’s warehouse, it would be your duty to answer the first issue yes. If the plaintiff has failed to so satisfy you of those facts, by the' greater weight of the evidence, then it would be your duty to answer that issue no.”

See also Graham v. North Carolina Butane Gas Co., 231 N.C. 680, 58 S.E.2d 757; Kiser v. Carolina Power & Light Co., 216 N.C. 698, 6 S.E.2d 713; Clare v. Bond County Gas Co., 356 Ill. 241, 190 N.E. 278; Bristol Gas & Electric Co. v. Deckard, 6 Cir., 10 F.2d 66, 67; Oesterreich v. Claas, 237 Wis. 343, 295 N.W. 766, 134 A.L.R. 499, 502 and note at 526 et seq.; Osborne v. Tennessee Electric Power Co., 158 Tenn. 278, 12 S.W.2d 947, 949. What was said by the Court of Appeals in the case last cited, which involved the failure to shut off electric current when informed of a dangerous situation, is pertinent here, viz.: “Defendant in error insisted, and its proof tended to show, that it did all that it reasonably could after notice of- the fire to relieve the situation of the menace of its wires, but whether after such notice as was indicated was received, it could, and should, by telephone orders have shut off the current, or have adopted the mode it did to further inform itself and act, and whether such investigations as it did make were with reasonable dispatch and efficiency under the circumstances, or whether the actions it did take were such that an ordinarily prudent man would have adopted under the circumstances, were questions for the jury and not for the court.”

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Bluebook (online)
186 F.2d 816, 32 A.L.R. 2d 234, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 3671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-electric-power-co-v-carolina-peanut-co-virginia-fire-marine-ca4-1951.