Webster v. Richmond Light & Railroad

158 A.D. 210, 143 N.Y.S. 57, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7304
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 25, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 158 A.D. 210 (Webster v. Richmond Light & Railroad) 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
Webster v. Richmond Light & Railroad, 158 A.D. 210, 143 N.Y.S. 57, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7304 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Stapleton, J.:

The plaintiff appeals from a judgment entered against her, dismissing her complaint at the close of her case. The action was brought to recover damages for neglect of the defendant whereby the death of her intestate was caused.

The decedent was employed as an assistant to the engineer in the City Farm Colony, an institution established and maintained by the city of New York. His general work was to make minor repairs to the plumbing, heating and electrical apparatus about the buildings of the colony. On the farm are seventeen buildings, one of which is known as the Burke Building and used as a dormitory, with accommodation for about two hundred aged and indigent women.

The defendant, a public service corporation, supplied electric current for illuminating purposes to the buildings, including the Burke Building. It owned, controlled and maintained a generating plant, poles, wires, transformers and pole conduits. The transformer is a device designed to reduce the voltage, and in this'case the reduction was from 2,200 to 110. It was attached to a pole near the building, and from it two sets of wires, encased in leads or mains, carried the low voltage current down the pole and into the building. The wires and connections between the. transformer and the switchboard were in excellent condition. In the transformer there were three coils of wire around the high potential coil, operated at 2,200 volts, and two others, each delivering 110 volts, to what is known as the secondary circuit. A witness skilled in electrical engineering found shortly after the casualty one secondary coil intact and the other secondary coil broken down, as to insulation, to the primary winding. He also found that there was an electrical connection between the primary coil, operating on 2,200 [212]*212volts, and the secondary coil, from which were delivered 110 volts for the operation of the lamps; that the inside of the transformer showed burns on the connection plate, caused by an electric current; that there was a breakdown between the primary winding and the secondary winding; that there was a breakdown between the right-hand primary coil and the right-hand secondary coil; that the two windings are entirely distinct from each other and are separated electrically unless there is such a breakdown; that the tests showed there was a specific breakdown between the primary winding and one-half of the secondary winding, there being two secondary .coils in the transformer. The result was to establish on the secondary system of wiring, a wire of which entered the building and connected with the switchboard, a pressure or electric potential equivalent to that on the primary system, namely, 2,200 volts. Twenty-two hundred volts is a fatal force; 110 volts are comparatively harmless.

On the 24th day of July, 1911, at three o’clock in the afternoon, the plaintiff’s intestate was working around the kitchen of the Burke Building, repairing a boiler valve. A fellow-workman noticed a blaze coming from a chandelier in the vestibule adjoining the kitchen. The blaze was fanshaped and about eight feet long. The attention of the decedent was attracted to the blaze. He procured a ladder and a patent fire extinguisher and ascended the ladder, bringing the extinguisher with him, and played the extinguisher upon the blaze. The blaze went out and the decedent descended' the ladder. There was a resumption of the blaze, the second blaze being about two and a half feet long. A witness was permitted, without objection, to testify that the deceased said he would run down and turn off the switch, and he thereupon suited his action to his word. That was the last his fellow-workmen saw of him in life. The canopy from which the blaze descended was not equipped with bulbs for lighting purposes at the time. The decedent obtained the key to the boiler room from a nurse who was in charge of the building. He came in to her in a hurry and asked for the key. About fifteen minutes afterwards the dead body of the decedent was found by the nurse, lying on the floor of the boiler room, under the switch[213]*213board. He had been killed by a deadly current of electricity. His right hand had evidences of deep charred burns, penetrating to the bone. The cause of death was cardiac paralysis, due to contact with a wire charged with commercially prepared • electricity. The switchboard was adjacent to the entrance door of the boiler room and was raised about three feet from the floor. Tne boiler room was about twenty-five feet square and contained two windows, each about twenty-five inches square. The windows were about fifteen feet away from the switchboard, on the opposite side of the room. There was no eyewitness to the casualty.

The secondaries from the transformer were not grounded. A skilled witness did not notice any hghtning arresters on the overhead circuit from the farm colony connected with the station. Another skilled witness described and defined a lightning arrester as follows: “ A lightning arrester is a device which is connected to line wires which are commonly exposed to the effects of electrical storms. This device carries a wire which is connected to receive, and by certain arrangements of terminals or electro-magnetic means, moving parts or otherwise, the conditions are so arranged that the high frequency lightning discharged, instead of traveling along those wires and proceeding into buildings and expensive apparatus, will be deflected into the ground, and do no damage.”

There was evidence that prior to the casualty an electrical storm was in progress, but that the lightning feature of it had subsided about a half hour previously, although the rain continued.

A skilled witness, called on behalf of the plaintiff and adopted by the defendant, testified that at the time he made his examination of the transformer he did not determine from his examination whether the breakdown in the transformer was due to lightning; that there was no primary evidence that lightning struck the transformer; and that there was no lightning indicated in the transformer. He gave his opinion that the lightning struck the primary lines leading to the transformer and then went to the transformer; that the pulling on the switch would have the effect of stopping the blaze from the canopy; and that the switchboard was of ordinary construction. Con[214]*214cerning the testimony of this witness it may be said that, while the plaintiff vouched for his credibility to a certain extent by placing him on the stand, if there was anything in his testimony which operated against her she had the right to claim he was mistaken as to that, to prove the facts as they really were and to ask that such inferences be drawn as were really warranted by the other evidence in the case. (Quick v. American Can Co., 205 N. Y. 330, 334.)

The plaintiff offered to show by a qualified witness that it was customary for illuminating companies to use a device, not used by the defendant, which would prevent high voltage from flowing from primary to secondary wires and' thence into buildings. This was objected to, excluded, and an exception taken. This ruling was erroneous and would of itself require' the reversal of the judgment of nonsuit. (Gray v. Siegel-Cooper Co., 187 N. Y. 376, 381; Dick v. Steel & Masonry Contracting Co., 153 App. Div. 651, 654; Flanagan v. Carlin Construction Co., 134 id. 236, 239.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 A.D. 210, 143 N.Y.S. 57, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-v-richmond-light-railroad-nyappdiv-1913.