Weissert v. City of Escanaba

299 N.W. 139, 298 Mich. 443, 1941 Mich. LEXIS 569
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1941
DocketDocket No. 90, Calendar No. 41,610.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 299 N.W. 139 (Weissert v. City of Escanaba) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weissert v. City of Escanaba, 299 N.W. 139, 298 Mich. 443, 1941 Mich. LEXIS 569 (Mich. 1941).

Opinion

Chandler, J.

The plaintiff herein was awarded a verdict by a jury against the city of Escanaba in the Delta county circuit court as damages for personal injuries received by him when he took hold of an electric light wire of defendant’s system on September 12, 1936. At this time plaintiff was 12 years of age.

For reasons which will hereinafter be disclosed, we are adopting the evidence offered by plaintiff, together with some of the undisputed evidence of defendant, as a statement of facts which were before the court and jury upon the trial of the issues here involved and which are to control us in the determination of the questions raised on this appeal.

Defendant, city of Escanaba, owns its own municipal light plant and also has an extension which runs outside of the city for a distance of several miles. Such extension lines run through Ford Eiver township on what is termed the Lake Shore road, being a paved highway, M-35, on which highway plaintiff lives. After leaving the city, defendant’s lines run largely through densely wooded territory within the highway right of way practically the entire distance. The highway right of way is 100 feet in width and in many places the wires and poles of defendant are beneath branches of trees. The electrical engineer and one of the State highway men, according to the undisputed testimony, patrolled this line at least once a month, and when the en *446 gineer discovered trees or branches that appeared to him dangerous, he would tell the highway man and-the department would send men out to cut them off, or sometimes they would give defendant permission to cut them. This testimony was further to the effect that the city did not cut trees or branches in the highway without permission of that department. At the point of the accident, the defendant’s poles and lines were about 35 feet from the center of the paved highway.

On the day of the accident the plaintiff was on his way home from school and when' about 1% miles from home, he saw a wire suspended over a driveway leading from the main highway to a lake cottage. The wire was about 2 feet above the ground and about 20 feet from the traveled portion of the highway. He walked up to the wire, picked it up and received a severe shock and serious burns. He said he knew it was an electric light wire, one that ran right by his home and from which his parents’ home had been furnished electricity ever since he was born. He said he did not think the wire was dangerous and never knew before that one could get a shock from a high power line.

Near the place of the accident and about 5 feet from the electric line, there was a birch tree about 16 to 18 inches in diameter and of a height of 40 to 50 feet. Immediately after the accident it was discovered that a limb was broken off the birch tree and was lying beneath the wire “so it appears that the limb was what knocked the wire off the pole.” This limb was about 6 inches thick and weighed about 60 pounds. Plaintiff’s testimony relative to the condition of the limb and tree immediately after *447 the accident was given by his father and is as follows:

“A. I noticed that it was rotten and that there was a limb fell off of it; a big heavy limb.

“Q, How long?

“A. That was a dead birch tree and it was about 16 to 18 inches; about stump height like a lumberjack cuts off a stump. It was kind of a stubby tree and it didn’t grow up very high before it began to branch out, and the limb was laying right beneath the wire, so it appears that that limb was what knocked the wire off of the pole.

“Q. How high was this tree?

“A. Well, the top of the leaves would be about 45 feet. The wires are on 30-foot poles out there and there is about 5 feet of those in the ground; 4 or 5 feet.

“Q. Did the tree extend then over the wires, the branches ?

“A. It was higher than the wires.

“Q. How close to the wire was the tree or the branches ?

“A. Oh, about 5 feet from the line. * * *

“I examined the branch. It was pretty heavy and there was a core to it yet, but it was rotten.

“Q. By core what do you understand by core?

“A. Well, there isn’t much core to a tree.

“Q. I don’t mean the natural core, I mean the un-rotten part.

“A. Well, it was still solid enough to hold the bark. Of course, white birch.when it gets rotten you can pick it and all the insides fall out, but this wasn’t as rotten as that. I would say that piece of branch weighed 60 pounds.

“Q. How long, to your knowledge, was that tree there?

“A. Well, that was the first time I ever noticed it.

“Mr. Rushton: It must have been there quite a while. It was two foot through.

*448 “Q. (By Mr. Archambean): What color was that tree?

“A. White, white birch, the tree is still there.

“Q. It is below the wires now?

“A. Well, when the accident happened there were still some limbs that were higher than the wires. I haven’t looked at it now for probably six months.”

On the day of the accident a severe rain and windstorm had been raging from 6 or 7 o’clock in the morning until the time of the accident, which was around 4 o ’clock in the afternoon.

The record discloses that the first notice or knowledge that defendant had that there was trouble with its line was a telephone message from plaintiff’s father immediately after the accident, and that the city electrician, Mr. Lindquist, with' two employees went at once to the scene of the accident and made the necessary repairs.

Mr. Lindquist testified to seeing the birch tree in question and the limb that was broken therefrom which evidently caused the wire to break, fall or sag. He said the limb was decayed; that there was nothing on the outside so to indicate; that there was nothing about the appearance of the birch tree in question that would indicate to him that it was dead; that if a birch tree was not in leaf when the rest were, he would assume it was dead.

It can readily be’ seen from the foregoing that thete was but very little, if any, conflict in the testimony on any material question of fact here involved.

The only reasonable inference that can be drawn from all of the testimony is that the cause of the wire being on the ground or, in suspension about 2 feet therefrom, was that sometime during the day in question, because of the windstorm, the branch from the birch tree described by the witnesses was *449 broken and blown on the defendant’s lines.

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Bluebook (online)
299 N.W. 139, 298 Mich. 443, 1941 Mich. LEXIS 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weissert-v-city-of-escanaba-mich-1941.