Wood v. Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co.

151 S.W. 29, 151 Ky. 77, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 746
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 6, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 151 S.W. 29 (Wood v. Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co., 151 S.W. 29, 151 Ky. 77, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 746 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

On the trial of this ease in tbe court below a verdict' was rendered for appellee in obedience to a peremptory instruction given by the court at the conclusion of the appellant’s evidence. So the only question arising on this appeal is whether or not the evidence introduced in behalf of the appellant was sufficient to take the case to the jury. The action was • brought by appellant to recover of appellee damages for the burning of his storehouse and goods, situated at Belton, a village in Muhlenberg County; it being alleged in the petition that the destruction of the property was caused by the negligence of appellee in failing to properly insulate its wires connected with and used in operating a desk telephone within the building and in failing to provide the [78]*78telephone or wires with a lightning arrester; furthermore, that the striking of the telephone wires by lightning, somewhere in the vicinity of the building, produced and carried into it an electric current of unusual force which started the fire, either by coming in contact with the goods stored therein, or overheating the wires within the building.

The building was in size seventy feet by one hundred feet, constructed of brick with a roof of tin. Its interior was divided into three apartments connected by arched openings in the partition walls, and the building, as a whole, occupied as a general or department store. There was a single room built over the southwest corner of the store building which appellant occupied as a sleeping room, and from this room a stairway led down into the store below. The telephone wires entered the main building at its north or rear end through the upper part of a window to the left of the door, and within the building extended along one of the partition walls, back of pine shelving, connecting with the telephone near a desk in the interior of the building.

The fire occurred about one o’clock in the morning and was first discovered by appellant, who was awakened from sleep by the smoke which entered the bedroom over the store. He made his escape from the building by descending from its roof to that of a coal house adjoining, thence to the ground.

It is manifest from the bill of evidence appearing in the record that the telephone wires were uninsulated where they entered the building and that they were neither there, nor elsewhere, provided with a lightning arrester; indeed, this is admitted by appellee. The evidence shows that porcelain tubes should be used for insulating such wires where the building is entered by them, and that the safety of persons operating telephones requires the use of lightning arresters, for grounding the electric currents, during the prevalence of electrical or thunder storms.

If it could be said that appellant’s right to recover damages, as claimed, depended .Wholly upon whether appellee’s failure to insulate its telephone wires and provide a lightning arrester was negligence, the peremptory instruction should not have been given. But as it was incumbent on him to further show that such negligence was the proximate cause of the burning of his storehouse and goods, it remains to be determined [79]*79whether the evidence introduced in his behalf conduced to prove that the telephone wires were struck by lightning outside the building, thereby creating upon them an additional electric current of unusual force, which, because of the negligent failure of appellee to properly insulate the wires or provide a lightning arrester, they, conducted into the building and caused the fire.

As said in City of Louisville v. Bridwell, 150 Ky., 589, with respect to an accident resulting in an injury; to the person of the plaintiff:

“It seems to be well settled in law that if the injury is the result of concurring causes, for one of which only the defendant is responsible, he must answer, or where the injury is the combined result of negligence and accident, the negligent party must answer, unless the injury would have happened if it had not been negligent.” 1 Thompson, section 68; City of Louisville v. Hart’s Admr., 143 Ky., 171; Whitman-McNamara Tobacco Co. v. Warren, 23 R., 2120; City of Louisville v. Johnson, 24 R., 685; 29 Cyc., 498.

Much of appellant’s evidence conduced to prove that as late as 9 o’clock on the night of the fire, the atmosphere was apparently charged with electricity, which manifested itself in frequent flashes of what is known as sheet lightning in various parts of the horizon. The evidence, however, falls short of showing that the electrical disturbances referred to could have imparted to the telephone wires an electric current of sufficient strength’ to have overheated them within the building or cause them to transmit the current into and ignite the building or its contents; indeed, no witness saw any display of electricity upon or about the wires, and appellant, who was in the store that night and did not retire until after 9 o’clock, gave no testimony that his telephone was affected in any way by the display of electricity on the outside.

It is true that appellant testified that some time during the night and before the fire he was awakened by a “loud clap of thunder” and vivid flash of lightning; and the witness, Latham, whose residence is a^half mile distant from Belton, testified that while standing in his door, he heard a “loud clap of thunder” and saw a great flash , of lightning apparently in the direction of Belton. He was unwilling to say whether this was twenty-five minutes after twelve or twenty-five minutes before one o’clock, although he at the time looked at [80]*80Ms watch, hut was confident that it was one or the other. It is insisted for appellant that the above evi-' dence, together with the fact that the fire was discovered about one o’clock, was sufficient to make it reasonably certain that the telephone wires were struck by lightning, which imparted to them a current of electricity so powerful as to cause them, in the absence of proper insulation, to pass it into the store and ignite it.

We are unable to accept this conclusion. If the telephone pole from which wires run into the building, and which stood within fifty feet of it, had shown any marks of a lightning stroke, or other poles in the vicinity had shown such marks, or anything in the appearance of the wires had indicated such an electrical visitation, it would have given support to appellant’s) theory as to the origin of the fire; but without such support the theory rests wholly upon conjecture.

According to the testimony of appellant the first discovery of the fire was made by him. When first seen by him the flames were coming out from the cornice and immediately under the eaves of the building in numerous places and the tin roof was rising and falling from the heated air beneath. Moreover, after he got to the door at the front of the building where he could see the entire inside, including the central part where the telephone was kept, he could see no light of any kind.

From these facts it might well be argued that the fire began in the ceiling and worked its way downward to the contents of the store, and that if the lightning, which accompanied the thunder heard by appellant, and, Latham, did any execution at all, it struck the store building instead of the telephone lines, and thereby ignited and destroyed it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 S.W. 29, 151 Ky. 77, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-cumberland-telephone-telegraph-co-kyctapp-1912.