Waldo & Penobscot Telephone Co. v. Central Maine Power Co.

159 A. 723, 131 Me. 158, 1932 Me. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 14, 1932
StatusPublished

This text of 159 A. 723 (Waldo & Penobscot Telephone Co. v. Central Maine Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waldo & Penobscot Telephone Co. v. Central Maine Power Co., 159 A. 723, 131 Me. 158, 1932 Me. LEXIS 34 (Me. 1932).

Opinion

Thaxter, J.

This case, after a verdict for the plaintiff for $4,908.34, is before us on the defendant’s motion for a new trial and on its exception to a ruling of the presiding Justice refusing to order a verdict for the defendant. The motion and the exception raise the same issue, and we shall accordingly consider only the motion.

The plaintiff has paid compensation to an injured employee, and in accordance with the provisions of B. S. 1930, Chap. 55, Sec. 24, seeks to recover for itself the sum so paid, and for the employee any amount beyond that which he may be entitled to receive because of injuries suffered by reason of the defendant’s negligence.

The plaintiff telephone company carries on its business in Waldo County. At the time of the accident which gave rise to this litigation it had in the town of Brooks a line which had been built in 1907. Along the same highway on which this ivas located the defendant in 1916 had constructed a power line, which at the time of the accident carried 33,000 volts of electricity. The high tension power wires were from three to four feet above the wires of the defendant.

On the accompanying plan poles 1, 2 and 3 represent the original location of the telephone line; 779, 780, 781. and 782 the power line. Poles 0, 2 and 3 indicate the position of the telephone line as it was being reconstructed at the time of the accident. As[160]*160suming pole 2 to be in a vertical position, the top bracket on it to which the telephone wires were attached would be from three to four feet under the power line. At this point the telephone wires crossed at an angle under those of the defendant, and here at a distance of approximately three feet the lines of the two companies were nearest each other. So long as the telephone wires remained attached to pole 2 their altitude at the point of the crossing was determined by the brackets on poles 2 and 3, unaffected in any respect by the height of the brackets on either pole 1 or pole O.

On July 22, 1930, the plaintiff had in its employ James B. Payson, who was Avorking here as a lineman with another man as helper. Poles 2 and 3 had been damaged and were leaning, pole 2 at an angle of about 30 degrees. These Avere reset and placed back in a vertical position; and the location of pole 1 was then changed by placing it at the point O. Poles 0, 2 and 3 were then in.a straight line. The significant part of this operation appears to be that though the brackets on pole 0 were a foot loAver than Avhen it was located a point 1, yet if the wires'were pulled taut between poles 0 and 3, they would be about eight feet above pole 2 and about four feet above the wires of the defendant poAver company.

When the work of resetting the poles had been completed, preparations Avere made to restring the Avires AA'hich were lying on the ground. One Avas apparently fastened to the insulator on pole 3, and then thrown over the bracket on pole O. A block was fastened to a tree beyond the pole, and,Avith the aid of a tackle on the ground, the wire resting across the bracket Avas pulled ahead and thus raised from the ground between poles 0 and 3. It was Payson’s purpose to lift the wire as high as the insulator on pole 2 ; and when he thought that it had reached this point, he fastened his tackle and climbed pole 0 to make his first permanent attachment of it there. While he was attempting to raise it the few inches from the bottom of the bracket to the insulator, the wire became charged Avith electricity and he received a shock which resulted in the injuries for which this suit is brought. That the electricity came from the wires of the defendant is conceded by both sides. The telephone Avire was attached to a house a feAV hundred feet southerly of pole 3 ; and the charge of electricity was sufficient to char the side of this house [161]*161where the wire entered it and to burn off the telephone wire near pole 2. Mrs. Delbert Ames who lived in the house testified that she heard a crash and saw a large flame near this same pole.

The negligence charged in the plaintiff’s declaration is that the defendant placed and maintained its wires too near the telephone line, and that as a consequence the electricity of the defendant jumped across the intervening space and then travelled over the wire of the telephone company to the body of Payson. There is in evidence an order of the Public Utilities Commission, effective May 1, 1928, applicable to the “reconstruction, replacement and maintenance of any of the existing facilities,” which provides that there shall be a minimum clearance of six feet between such lines as we are concerned with here.

The defendant maintains that there was no breach of this rule,, which was not intended to force the reconstruction of all existing-lines not having the minimum clearance. If, however, there was a violation of it, the defendant says that such violation was not the-proximate cause of the injuries to Payson, who was himself negligent in raising his telephone wire so that it either came in contact with the power line or within a few inches of it so that an arc-, formed from one to the other.

The plaintiff’s case is based on the assumption that Payson irt doing his work did not raise his wire any nearer to the power line-than it had always been. The defendant tries to refute this claim by pointing out that the telephone poles were in a leaning position and that the plaintiff in straightening them did bring its wire in closer-proximity to the power line. It seems obvious, however, that the-poles were not set in the first instance in other than a vertical position, and the evidence substantiates the plaintiff’s contention: that, after the telephone poles were straightened, the brackets or them were in the same relative position to the power line as they had been originally. The real issue is, therefore, whether the location of the defendant’s wires within a distance of from three to four feet of those of the plaintiff was negligence which contributed as a proximate cause to the injury to Payson.

On this point much expert testimony has been given, and as we read the evidence there is no material conflict in fundamentals be[162]*162tween the witnesses for the plaintiff and those for the defense. The plaintiff’s thesis seems to be to establish the fact that electricity can jump from one wire to another a distance of from three to four feet through the air. It is not, however, without significance that these lines had remained in these positions for a period of fourteen years under varying atmospheric conditions, through summer heat and winter cold, and no such phenomenon had ever before been recorded as took place while the plaintiff’s employee was working there on the afternoon of July 22, 1930, when admittedly the weather conditions were normal in every respect. The plaintiff relies particularly on the testimony of Professor Woodruff of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, an authority on electric power transmission. He states that electricity may pass through the air from one conductor to another either in the form of a corona or in an arc. The air is a nonconductor but is often broken down in close proximity to wires heavily charged with electricity, and as a result small amounts of current known as a corona escape over this modified air. This discharge may manifest itself to the eye as a' glow or to the ear by a hissing sound, and may transfer itself to other wires if they are sufficiently near.

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Bluebook (online)
159 A. 723, 131 Me. 158, 1932 Me. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waldo-penobscot-telephone-co-v-central-maine-power-co-me-1932.