Wells v. Northeastern Telephone Co.

64 A. 648, 101 Me. 371, 1906 Me. LEXIS 40
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 9, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 64 A. 648 (Wells v. Northeastern Telephone 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
Wells v. Northeastern Telephone Co., 64 A. 648, 101 Me. 371, 1906 Me. LEXIS 40 (Me. 1906).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

The plaintiff recovered a verdict of $804 for the destruction of her barn and its contents by fire alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant company in the construction and maintenance of its telephone line past the plaintiff’s premises on the west side of the highway in the town of Avon. The case comes to this court on the defendant’s motion to set the verdict aside as against the weight of evidence. The exceptions are not insisted upon.

The defendant’s line wires appear to have been suspended upon poles in the ordinary manner, one of the poles being erected within about five feet of the northeast corner of the plaintiff’s barn. There was a curve in the road at this point and to counteract the tendency of the line wire to draw this pole from its vertical position, a guy wire, consisting of a piece of ordinary telephone wire, was stretched from the pole to the corner of the barn. One end of this guy wire appears to have been wound around the pole at a point about two feet below the telephone wires, and the other end attached to the barn by means of a lag screw driven into the corner post a short distance below the eaves. There was no lightning arrester, or other [374]*374appliance connected with this guy wire or with the telephone wires in that vicinity, to divert powerful currents to the earth at the time of thunder- storms. Immediately before the fire on the morning of August 22, 1903, a thunder' shower came up in the vicinity of the plaintiff’s buildings. The rain fall was light, but it was followed by a discharge of lightning of extraordinary violence, though but a single flash of light was observed. About 650 feet north of the barn a large elm tree was standing on the easterly side of the road with its branches overhanging the travelled way and extending nearly to the telephone wires on the westerly side. The lightning struck this tree near the top and ran down almost the entire length of it splitting off a large branch nearly to the ground and stripping off some of the bark. One part of this electric discharge then appeared to cross the street under the telephone wires while another part ran along a wire fence.

Of the eleven telephone poles in the line extending northerly from the barn about 1800 feet, four, namely, numbers one, three, four and ten, counting from north to south were evidently shattered or slivered by the action of some part of this same electric discharge, while the other seven poles did not appear to have been injured by the lightning. Nor was there any distinct evidence of such injury to the pole at the corner of the barn or to any pole south of the barn. But the board on the corner post at the north east corner of the barn was newly split from a point a little above the lag screw, to which the guy wire was attached, downward nearly to the sill. When first seen the fire was in this corner of the barn directly beneath the point where the guy wire was connected with it, and there was no indication that the barn was struck by lightning at any other point.

Upon this state of facts it was the theory of the plaintiff that a fragment of the lightning bolt which shattered the elm tree, struck the telephone wires in close proximity to the overhanging branches; that an electric current was conducted by these wires to the most northerly pole that was found to be slivered, and in the opposite direction, past, the most southerly pole that was splintered, to the pole at the corner of the barn; and that a current then passed into [375]*375the guy wire and thence by the wire to the corner of the barn which was thus ignited.

On the other hand the defendant company claims that of the three different general forms in which lightning may be discharged from the clouds to the earth, namely, the nearly direct line, the zigzag or angular course and the form of the inverted tree, the discharge in this case assumed the form of the branches of an inverted tree] that some of these branches struck the elm tree and the four telephone posts, independently o£ each other; that one of these fragments ini like manner struck the corner of the barn and thus directly caused the fire; and that no electric current was conducted in either direction by the telephone wires and that none passed over the guy wire to the barn.

The defendant’s theory is that the plaintiff’s barn was destroyed by lightning which descended directly from the clouds and communicated the fire without the intervention or conduction of any of its telephone wires; and the company accordingly contends in the first place that nothing in the construction or maintenance of its telephone line past the plaintiff’s premises can be deemed the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s loss.

In support of the plaintiff’s theory, attention is called not only to the manifestations of the lightning stroke actually observed at the time in question and the facts already stated in regard to the shattered poles of the telephone line and the riven board at the corner of the barn where the guy wire was attached and the fire was first seen; but also to the testimony of three electricians who gave evidence as experts upon the questions involved. Mr. Mallett, for twelve years an instructor in electrical science and a civil engineer does not controvert the proposition that lightning may be discharged to the earth in the form of the branches of an inverted tree, and is of opinion that when the lightning struck the elm tree in this case there might have been a secondary discharge which struck the telephone wires or poles and then followed the wires and passed to the earth by the best conductor it could find; but in his judgment a discharge in the form of the branches of a tree, or in any other form, would not be so widely diffused as to strike objects more than [376]*376two hundred feet distant from the principal charge. He also states that it is in accordance with his actual observation in a similar instauce cited by him, that lightning will follow telephone wires or a wire fence, and shatter some of the poles or posts, and jump over and leave untouched others in the same line.

Mr. Whitney, electrical engineer for twenty years, corroborates these statements and refers to his own observation of poles in a telephone line, shattered by lightning which left' the wires, though insulated in the usual manner, and ran down the poles below the brackets on which the wires were strung. The substance of the explanation given seemed to be that when a telephone pole was wet it was a very good conductor, and in case of lightning the quantity of electricity which -may be discharged upon the wires is so greatly in excess of their carrying capacity that a part of it will leave the wires, and follow the poles to the earth.

Mr. Berry who has been engaged in. the electric light business for seventeen years, a portion of the time as inspector of wires, and had made a special study of electrical construction, also explains in answer to interrogatories that in case of a very heavy discharge of lightning upon three telephone wires, the proportional part of it which those wires would be able to carry off would be very small for the reason that the potential of.

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Related

Hellweg v. Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co.
110 F.2d 546 (D.C. Circuit, 1940)
Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. v. Noblette
199 A. 832 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 A. 648, 101 Me. 371, 1906 Me. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-northeastern-telephone-co-me-1906.