Wheeler v. Northern Ohio Traction Co.

17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 517
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJune 15, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 517 (Wheeler v. Northern Ohio Traction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeler v. Northern Ohio Traction Co., 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 517 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

COOK, J.

This ease is one of more than ordinary importance and presents some new questions, the solution of which is not entirely free from doubt.

The decedent, D. P. Wheeler, was the cashier of the Citizens National Bank of the city of Akron.

The bank had a contract with the defendant, The Northern Ohio Traction Company, to furnish it with electricity to light its bank with incandescent lamps and for no other purpose. The amount of electricity required for such purpose was 104 volts and should not exceed at furthest more than 110 volts as the incandescent-lamp was only calculated to carry that amount of voltage, as the traction company well knew. The bank was the owner of the wires inside the bank and also of the lamps and placed the same in position while the traction company was the owner and had exclusive control of the wires leading up to the wall of the bank where the same connected with the wires of the bank. Upon the alley adjoining the bank the traction company had a pole some thirty-six or forty feet high upon which were three transformers. Into these transformers ran the primary wires of the traction company carrying a current of 1,040 volts and these transformers were intended to reduce the amount of the current to 104 volts which, was carried over what is known as seconadry wires to the various business places lighted by the company, and it was these secondary wires that carried the current into the bank.

In this alley were also a large number of telephone and telegraph wires but no other electric light wires but those of the traction company, as it was the only person or company that had traction or light wires in the city of Akron. The bank for many years had had an electric lamp attached to a cord hanging from the ceiling which was used in opening the safe in the vault by throwing the light upon the dial of the safe. On Christmas morning Mi*. Wheeler, the decedent, as had been his custom for a number of years, on holidays, went to the bank at about 10 o’clock in the morning for the purpose of opening his mail and seeing that everything was right in the vault. He went to the vault, took hold ■of the handle of the door with his right hand and the electric lamp [519]*519with the other to light him in opening the safe and immediately a current of electricity went through him of sufficient force to kill him. He was found about 2 o’clock in the afternoon dead with his right hand tightly clutching the safe door and his left hand the electric lamp, two of the fingers on his left hand being entirely burned off.

The evidence shows that a current of electricity of 104 volts, will not produce death or serious injury, and further that there were electrical disturbances the night before upon the wires connected with the pole, on which the transformers were placed, and further there were electrical shocks in other business houses, the wires of which were connected with the same transformer as the wires of the bank. From these facts we are convinced that a very high current went through the deceased, certainly more than 500 volts and probably the full current of the primary wires, 1,040 volts, and that this excessive current came from the secondary wires of the traction company leading into the bank, which was generated at its plant.

Under these facts the plaintiff asking the court by special requests to charge the jury as follows:

“7. If you find from the evidence that the defendant furnished to the Citizens’ National Bank electricity for pay and it was understood by defendant and the bank and the employes of the bank, including the decedent, that the current so to be furnished was to be of a harmless voltage, and you further find that on this Christmas day the defendant sent or permitted to pass over its wires and into the bank a current dangerous to human life without warning the bank or its employes, you may and should presume the defendant guilty of negligence, and the burden then would be on the defendant to remove that presumption and the plaintiff would not in the first instance be required to show how the dangerous current got on defendant’s wires and into the bank.
“8. If you find from the evidence that on this day a dangerous current, one which would kill a man, passed over defendant’s wires into the bank building and onto the wires therein and such current killed Mr. Wheeler, the law will presume that the defendant was guilty of negligence and the burden would be on defendant to explain how the current was on the wire and remove that presumption. ’ ’

The court did not give these requests but gave two requests of defendant directly to the contrary. We think these requests of plaintiff should have been given to the jury and that the refusal and the giving of the request of defendant to the contrary was error on the part of the trial court. It will be observed that the traction company had impliedly at least agreed to furnish a current of electricity of not more [520]*520than 104 volts, which was harmless. Contrary to its agreement it had sent a more excessive current through it, one that was deadly and did kill the decedent. It had exclusive control over the plant that generated the electricity and of the wires that carried it into the bank. Whatever voltage came from its plant and over its secondary wires must of necessity go into the bank.

The bank had no control whatever over these appliances of the traction company. True the bank had control over its own wires but that .could not affect the case as it in no manner could control the amount of current that came over the traction company’s wires. Indeed for all practical purposes they were as much under the control of the traction company as its own wires. If the current was harmless it was harmless, if deadly it was deadly, and the bank could not control it. The employes of the bank were under the care and control of the traction company in this regard.

We think the cases of Iron Ry. v. Mowery, 36 Ohio St. 418 [38 Am. Rep. 597] and the Clev. C. & C. Ry. v. Walrath, 38 Ohio St. 461 [43 Am. Rep. 433], in the facts and the questions decided are very much like the case before us. In the former it was held:

“On the trial of an action against a railroad company by a passenger, for an injury received through a collision of the trains of the company, a prima facie presumption of negligence arises against the company.”

In the charge, page 419, the court said:

“It being admitted that the defendant is a carrier of passengers, that, on the occasion mentioned in the petition, the plaintiff was a passenger on defendant’s train, having paid his fare as stated, it was the duty of defendant to carry him safely to the point of his destination without injury; and when it is shown that defendant failed to carry the plaintiff safely to the place of his destination, this failure puts the defendant, prima facie, in the wrong, and the burden of proof devolves upon it to show that the injury was the result of a pure accident, and that it could not have been prevented by the exercise of the utmost care and skill which prudent men are accustomed to employ under similar circumstances.”

Upon page 422, the court says:

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Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-northern-ohio-traction-co-ohiocirct-1905.