Zumbrun v. City of Osawatomie

10 P.2d 3, 135 Kan. 26, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 146
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 9, 1932
DocketNo. 30,144
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 10 P.2d 3 (Zumbrun v. City of Osawatomie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zumbrun v. City of Osawatomie, 10 P.2d 3, 135 Kan. 26, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 146 (kan 1932).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This was an action for damages against the city of Osawatomie for the death of Lloyd E. Zumbrun, who was electrocuted in the attic of a two-story building while engaged in changing the position of a drop light to serve the convenience of a doctor whose office was immediately below.

The principal facts were these: For some time prior to the summer of 1927 the city of Osawatomie owned and operated an electric light plant which served the town and its inhabitants. The system of wiring which supplied the current was “a single-phase, three-wire, 220-volt, secondary system.” In this sort of system there are three-fold sets of wires which radiate from a transformer, and each set furnishes current to a particular- group of buildings. In each of these threefold sets, two of the wires are charged with electricity— “hot wires” the workmen call them — and one wire which is neutral. To get a lighting current one of the hot wires is connected with the neutral. The function of the transformer is to reduce the higher voltage coming from the dynamos of the power plant to 110, which constitutes the usual strength of current used for lighting purposes. Some years ago this sort of system for distributing electric light and power was common, but in recent years it has been found that the neutral wire should be methodically grounded to guard against accidental contact with current of higher voltage. The city’s distributing system did not conform to this later and safer practice of grounding the neutral wire in each threefold set.

On July 2, 1927, one Doctor Pool, a tenant on the second floor of [28]*28a certain business building in Osawatomie, telephoned to one Otis Pierce, who was engaged in the business of furnishing electric supplies and services, that he desired an extension electric light hung in front of his operating chair. Pierce sent his employee, Zumbrun, to attend to it. Zumbrun arrived and with the aid of a stepladder he climbed through a ceiling hatchway into the attic, where he made some effort to make the requisite connection. Then he descended into the hallway near the doctor’s office and-reported that he had fixed the desired connection and went away. Shortly afterwards Doctor Pool tried to turn on the light, but it would not work, so he telephoned that fact to Pierce. This telephone statement brought the response that a man would be sent over immediately to fix it. Soon Zumbrun reappeared, tried the electric bulb, which would not work. He then tried it in another socket, but it gave no light there. So he remounted the ladder and passed into the attic. Doctor Pool soon noticed that all sounds in the attic had ceased. He called a fellow tenant, Clarence Chambers, who climbed the ladder and looked into the attic and spoke to Zumbrun, but got no response. The Pierce shop was notified; Pierce appeared and climbed into the attic; he caught hold of Zumbrun’s hand and received an electric shock which partly stunned him. Pierce then descended the ladder and went to the switch block in the hallway and turned off the current. Some other men climbed into the attic, and found Zumbrun’s dead body lying on the rafters within two feet of the ceiling, with one wrist lying on an electric wire and one ankle on a gas pipe which apparently had made a connection for the electric current to pass with fatal results through Zumbrun’s perspiring body and sweaty clothing on that hot July day.

Plaintiff, as widow of Zumbrun, brought this action on her own behalf and that of her minor daughter against the defendant city.. Her petition charged that Zumbrun’s death was caused by the city’s negligent failure to ground the neutral wire to prevent the threefold set of wires from carrying an excess current into the building. Her petition alleged:

“That the service so maintained to supply electric current to said buildings is known as single-phase, three-wire, 220-volt construction, there being two service wires carrying current and a neutral wire. . . .
“Plaintiff alleges that in order to insure safety to property and life it is necessary according to approved methods of construction and in the proper construction of said electric - system, that the said neutral wire should be properly grounded. . . .
[29]*29“Plaintiff further alleges that on July 2, 1927, and for a long time prior thereto, the said neutral wire above mentioned, was not grounded and that one of the service wires at that time carried more than 220 volts of electric current.
“Plaintiff further alleges that the defendant city was negligent in not having said neutral wire properly grounded and in maintaining and permitting its service wire to carry a high and dangerous voltage of electricity, and that the death of said Lloyd M. Zumbrun was directly caused by the said negligence of said city.”

Defendant’s answer, among other matters, pleaded a city ordinance, entitled: “An ordinance relating to the registration of electricians, regulating inside wiring and providing a penalty for the violation thereof.” This ordinance made it unlawful for any person to install or'alter any electrical wiring without a permit from the city, good for one year, which Zumbrun did not have. The ordinance excused employees of an electric supply and service shop from having such a permit if their employer had one; but Pierce, Zumbrun’s employer, did not have such a permit. The ordinance also provided that no alterations of inside wiring or the attaching of devices using electric current should be made without a permit from the superintendent of the light department, and such work had to be done under the direction of the superintendent. This provision of the ordinance was ignored by Zumbrun and his employer. Under the ordinance city employees and persons wiring their own buildings under the rules and regulations of the ordinance were not required to haye a permit. Misdemeanors for breach of the ordinance were defined and penalties prescribed.

Defendant’s answer also alleged that Zumbrun met his death while committing a breach of the city ordinance. Defendant also pleaded Zumbrun’s contributory negligence. Its answer on this point, in part, alleged—

“That the said Zumbrun was further negligent and careless in undertaking to do the acts mentioned in the plaintiff’s petition with reference to the electric wires therein described without first unscrewing the fuses and removing the same so as to shut off the electric current on the wires when he first entered the building before climbing to the attic at the point where he was to be engaged in the chores described in plaintiff’s petition, which he could have easily done and which it was his duty to do before undertaking any of the acts described in plaintiff’s petition with reference to the said electric wire and thereby he would have avoided every possibility of any injury from any voltage.”

Jury trial; long record; many witnesses pro and con testified. [30]*30The jury returned a verdict for $4,000 in favor of plaintiff; judgment was rendered thereon, and the city appeals.

1. The first error urged relates to the overruling of defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence. Defendant stresses the fact that Zumbrun was an electrician regularly engaged in the sort of work he was doing when he met his death.

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Bluebook (online)
10 P.2d 3, 135 Kan. 26, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zumbrun-v-city-of-osawatomie-kan-1932.