York v. General Utility Corp.

176 N.W. 352, 44 N.D. 51, 1919 N.D. LEXIS 235
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 27, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 176 N.W. 352 (York v. General Utility Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
York v. General Utility Corp., 176 N.W. 352, 44 N.D. 51, 1919 N.D. LEXIS 235 (N.D. 1919).

Opinions

Grace, J.

This action is one to recover for personal injuries received by the plaintiff, on the 6th day of July, 1916, at the city of [57]*57New Rockford, North Dakota, which injuries are alleged to be due to the negligence of the defendants.

The case was twice tried to the court and a jury. In the first trial, the jury returned a verdict in plaintiff’s favor for $14,750. From the judgment entered upon that verdict, an appeal was taken to this court, and, for errors in the instructions of the court, it was reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial, which was had, the jury returning a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $15,164.10.

No motion was made for a new trial after the entry of the last judgment. The case again comes before this court on appeal from the •judgment.

The material facts in the case are, in substance, as follows: The General Utility Corporations owns and operates, among others, an Electric Light and Power Plant at New Rockford, from which it furnished its patrons electric light and power.

James Rheinfrank, at the time of ‘the accident, and sometime prior thereto, was the superintendent of the plant. The plaintiff, prior to and at the time of the accident, was in the employ of one Beaudry, who was operating a heating, plumbing, and electrical shop in the city of New Rockford.

The defendant, in conducting its business at New Rockford, had erected poles, which were strung with wires for the purpose of transmitting an electric current for light and power purposes. It had erected poles and strung wires thereon, on Stenson and Lamborn streets, which extended east and west, parallel, and one block distant from each other. Between these two streets, there extended an alley, in and along which there were poles and wires used for furnishing light to its patrons who reside on each of these streets.

The poles, to which particular attention is directed in this action, are in the alley, between the two cross streets, known as Fourth street on the east, and New Haven street on the west. The poles were about 7 inches in diameter. To them were attached the crossarms, which were 6 feet in length, thus extending on either side of the pole a little less than 3 feet.

The house of W. J. Payne and the house of Kellington face Stenson street. Each were furnished with an electric current for lighting pur[58]*58•poses. The Lasher house faces Lamborn street; this, likewise, was furnished with an electric current.

On each of the poles in this alley, there were two crossarms. On the top crossarm, there were five primary wires, each carrying a voltage of 2,300 volts. On the second crossarm were the secondary wires, which received their current from the primary wires, through a transformer, thus reducing the voltage from 2,300 to 110 volts.

The light to the Payne, Kellington, Lasher, and other homes along that alley, was furnished by secondary wires, which carry a voltage not to exceed 110 volts.

In the alley, at the entrance from New Haven street, and east along' the alley, are poles, and on them, on the top crossarm, on the right-hand side of the poles, which is the south side, there are three primary wires, used to furnish power and light to the city. On the left hand or north side of the poles, on the top crossarm, there are two primary wires which were used only in connection with the secondary wires in furnishing light to the different homes along the alley.

In this alley, towards the east, on the second crossarm, to the right or south side, there was one secondary wire, and to the left or north of the poles, on the same crossarm, there were two of the secondary wires. Two of the secondary wires were positive, and the other, which was in the center, was negative or neutral, and was used in furnishing light to any of the houses, and was always connected with one of the positive wires, thus reducing the voltage to 110 volts at the homes.

On the top crossarms of these poles, there were six wooden pegs, three on either side of the pole, and they were approximately I inches inches high above the crossarm. They were used for the purpose of putting thereon glass cups as insulators, to which the wires carrying electric currents could be tied when strung upon the poles. A similar arrangement was had with reference to the second crossarms. On a pole in this alley, behind the Kellington house, the center, secondary, neutral wire, on the second crossarm, was attached to the third wooden peg, which was to the left or north side of the pole, and, from that peg, a wire led to the first erossarm, and attached to the third peg of the first crossarm, to the left or north of the pole, and, from there, this wire led directly north or to the left, to the Lasher home on Lamborn [59]*59street. It passed underneath, and close to the primary wires, each of which carried a voltage of 2,300 volts.

The two primary wires, which were on the first crossarm to the left or north of the poles, which were used to carry the current for furnishing light to the homes along the alley, are claimed to have been placed there in the late fall of 1915, or in the spring of 1916, by James Rheinfrank, superintendent of the defendants’ plant.

It appears, there were no glass insulators placed upon the pegs at that time, and these primary wires, each carrying the 2,300 voltage, were placed on top of the crossarms, between the first and second, and the second and third, pegs, and simply rested loosely upon the cross-arms, and were not attached to anything. These wires were thus placed upon the pole, behind the Kellington house, and came in close proximity, or possibly in contact with the secondary wire, which was stretched upward from the second crossarm to the first crossarm, and which extended directly beneath the primary wires which were on the north side of the pole, having been allowed to lie loosely on the crossarms, as above stated, and which, as stated, came in close proximity, or possibly in contact, with the secondary wire, which carried the current to the Lasher house and all of the houses along this particular alley. The current which it carried should not exceed 110 volts. This was the wire which conducted the current to the home of W. J. Payne, where the plaintiff was injured on the day in question. This wire, by reason of its close proximity, or possibly its contact with the primary wires referred to, which were unprotected, it is claimed, that day, ■carried a voltage of 2,300 volts instead of 110 volts.

On July 6, 1916, the plaintiff, in pursuance of his duties to his employer was engaged in wiring a house in a small town, some 8 miles south of New Rockford. He returned from there to New Rockford about 4 o’clock in the afternoon, and, having gone to the shop of his employer, he learned there was trouble with the lights at the Payne and Kellington homes. He and his helper went to the Payne home, where he found no one except a boy about twelve years’ of age. The plaintiff went to the second floor of this house, inserted some new fuses, and tested the lights, which he found to be all right after the insertion of .the new fuses.

He then tested the lights on the first floor, and found them in proper [60]*60condition and operating in proper manner. He was then informed by the boy in question, that the electric wire in the basement was broken. He and the helper went to the basement.

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Bluebook (online)
176 N.W. 352, 44 N.D. 51, 1919 N.D. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/york-v-general-utility-corp-nd-1919.