Williams ex rel. Williams v. Springfield Gas & Electric Co.

202 S.W. 1, 274 Mo. 1, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 29, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 202 S.W. 1 (Williams ex rel. Williams v. Springfield Gas & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams ex rel. Williams v. Springfield Gas & Electric Co., 202 S.W. 1, 274 Mo. 1, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 1 (Mo. 1918).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

This cause was transferred here by the Springfield Court of Appeals. The appeal is from a judgment for damages for injuries suffered by respondent, then nine years old, from contact with ap-' pellant’s electric wires. These wires carried a powerful current, and were so placed that they passed through a tree which stood on or very near the line dividing a public alley from a building lot in Springffeld. The tree was thirty or more feet high and its lower branches were near the ground. It was a tree which children could and did climb easily. The insulation of the wires [8]*8near and in the tree had been in bad condition for a year or more. Respondent was injured on May 9th. Nearly two months before that date the lot owner commenced the erection of a bungalow. From the beginning, without interference from the owner, children played about and in the building. The center of the trunk of the tree near the ground was thirty-two inches from the end wall of the house. Appellant’s nearest wire, as it passed through the tree, was thirty-six inches from the end wall and twelve inches from the edge of the cornice, and was twenty feet high. On May 9tn the house was nearing completion. The roof, at the highest point, next the tree, was twenty-six feet and three inches high. The tree extended several feet above this. On that date respondent and several other boys were playing about the bungalow, and in the course of their games respondent went upon the roof and up to or near the ridge pole. The owner, then present, told the boys to come down. Respondent at once went to the edge of the roof nearest the tree and climbed from the roof to the tree along a limb or bough which extended out over the house. He reached the trunk of the tree or a point very near it and began to descend. He stepped down upon another limb which broke, and he fell against the wires and was severely shocked and burned. He fell to the ground, but there is no evidence he received any injury except those inflicted by the wires. Respondent had not been in the tree before.

Care.

I. The Court of Appeals (187 S. W. 556) gave recognition to the general principle that a company like appellant, if reasonably chargeable with knowledge, or of facts making it reasonably probable that persons may lawfully come into close proximity to its wires for purposes either of business or pleasure, is obligated “to use every precaution which was accessible to insulate its wires at” such places and to use the utmost care to keep them so. [Geismann v. Electric Co., 173 Mo. l. c. 674; Von [9]*9Thebra v. Gaslight Co., 209 Mo. l. c. 659; Clark v. Railroad, 234 Mo. l. c. 418, 419; Campbell v. United Rys., 243 Mo. l. c. 152.]

cwidren°,f impuises.

II. The Court of Appeals also recognized the rule that a company stretching electric wires, in a city, through trees like the evidence tends to show the tree in this case to have been, must take notice boyish impulses and anticipate the pres-enee of children in such trees. In this connection it quoted from a case (Temple v. Elec. Co., 89 Miss. 1) in which the Supreme Court of Mississippi said: “Whether this appellee knew that this particular small boy was in the habit of climbing this tree or not, it is clear from the averments of the declaration that it did know the tree, the kind of tree, and, knowing that, knew what any person of practical common sense would know — that it was just the kind of tree that children might climb into to play in the branches.” The Court of Appeals cited cases and texts supporting the principle. It is well established. [Mullen v. Gas & Elec. Co., 229 Pa. l. c. 57, 58; Benton v. Public Service Corporation, 165 N. C. l. c. 357; Thompson v. Slater, 193 S. W. (Mo. App.) l. c. 973, 974; Sweeten v. Power & Light Co., 88 Wash. 679; Electric Light Co. v. Healy, 65 Kan. 798; Meyer, Admx., v. Light & Traction Co., 151 Wis. l. c. 279; Talkington v. Power Co., 96 Wash. 386; Birmingham Ry., L. & P. Co. v. Cockrum, 179 Ala. 372; Hayes v. Power Co., 95 S. C. 230; O’Gara v. Electric Co., 244 Pa. St. l. c. 159, 160; Curtis on Law of Electricity, sec. 512; Joyce on Electric Law, sec. 445.] The Temple case often has been cited approvingly in yet other decisions and, so far as we can discover, has been criticised in none. The principle is sound.

[10]*10 ■^|PUcati°n to Facts.

[9]*9III. Having reached these conclusions, the Court of Appeals further held the principle of the Temple case inapplicable. It held there was no reasonable probability of an occurrence like that detailed in the evidence and, [10]*10therefore, there is no liability, concluding thus: “Applying these principles to this case, we cannot hold that defendant should have anticipated that a hoy, or any one, would climb to the apex of the roof and attempt to go from there to the top of this tree, and in so doing fall on these wires. ’ ’

After a careful examination of the record, we are convinced the Court of Appeals fell into error as to the facts. Two witnesses testified as to the time and manner of respondent’s fall. Both testified he had climbed into the tree and had begun to descend before he fell. That part of the testimony quoted by the Court of Appeals does not negative this idea, and other testimony of the witness quoted, both on direct and cross-examination, is clearly to the effect that respondent had begun his descent before he fell upon the wires. The bough over which respondent climbed into the tree did not give way. Nor did respondent fall while climbing into the tree. The photograph is not conclusive. The photographer testified the position of the camera had much to do with the appearance of nearness or distance between objects shown by a photograph. Mrs. Hughes gave testimony tending to show branches had been cut from the tree after the accident and before the photograph was taken. Even without any of this testimony, it certainly could not be conclusively held there was no evidence the boy climbed into the tree from the house. The decisions cited by the Court of Appeals as warranting the holding last mentioned are, in general, those proceeding upon the principle that an electric company which has placed its wires where they are practically inaccessible or where they can be reached only by overcoming considerable difficulty or danger, i. e., in places where the presence of persons is not reasonably to be anticipated, is not, ordinarily, liable for injuries resulting from contact with them. [Card v. Electric Co., 77 Wash. l. c. 569; Braun v. Electric Co., 200 N. Y. l. c. 494, 495.] Several decisions cited in the opinion are from courts which have [11]*11approved and applied the rule in the Temple case, and others distinguish it. None of them criticises it. The facts of the record render these cases inapplicable, and bring the case within the principle of the Temple case. That principle, so far as this case is concerned, is that electric companies which stretch wires through trees which children can climb must anticipate the presence of children in such trees and govern themselves accordingly. Everybody knows boys will climb trees. It is the probability of their presence there which brings trees within the general rule of Geismann v. Elec. Co., supra. The rule is not that only such hoys are protected as may climb from the ground into a tree. The thing required to he anticipated is the presence of children in the tree. The method by which they get into it cannot ordinarily he very important.

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202 S.W. 1, 274 Mo. 1, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-ex-rel-williams-v-springfield-gas-electric-co-mo-1918.