James A. McKowen
Hunt & Wilson
Charleston, West Virginia
Attorney for the Appellant
Lawrence Morhous
Brewster, Morhous, and Cameron
Bluefield, West Virginia
Attorney for the Appellee
This Opinion was delivered PER CURIAM
Per Curiam:
The plaintiff, Vickie C. Harris, Administratrix of the
Estate of Troy W. Harris, appeals from a final order of the Circuit
Court of Raleigh County, dated November 29, 1990, denying her
motion for a new trial. On appeal, the plaintiff contends that the
jury was given an erroneous instruction which had the effect of
directing a verdict in favor of the defendant, Matherly Machinery,
Inc., if the jury found that the decedent, Troy Harris, had been
warned of the existence and location of overhead power lines. We
agree that the instruction was erroneous, and that the circuit
court committed reversible error.
On October 13, 1986, the decedent was employed as a truck
driver for Brownie's, Inc. The defendant had contracted Brownie's,
Inc. to transport a crane from Indianapolis, Indiana, to Flat Top,
West Virginia. Mr. Harris was given the driving assignment by
Brownie's, Inc. and delivered one-half of the crane to defendant's
premises. Decedent arrived with another employee of Brownie's,
Inc., Robert Richmond, who was to operate a boom by which the crane
would be unloaded from decedent's truck.
Prior to unloading the crane, decedent and Mr. Richmond
were given instructions by defendant's employees where to unload
the crane. Two employees of defendant were to aid Mr. Richmond
once he had removed the crane from decedent's tractor-trailer. The
evidence is ambiguous and in dispute as to how specific the
instructions where to place the crane were, and who was ultimately
responsible for those instructions. In any event, it is
uncontested that there were electric power lines in the general
area where decedent and Mr. Richmond were instructed to unload the
crane.
Once Mr. Richmond had removed the crane from decedent's
truck, decedent drove his truck from the immediate area, parked it,
and returned. At that stage a decision was reached to move the
crane a short distance from its initial resting place, because it
was edging into defendant's driveway. The decedent attempted to
guide the crane to its new resting place, but as the load was
released, he was electrocuted. No one saw whether the boom
actually came in contact with the power lines, or whether the
electricity arced to the boom. At trial, there was testimony that
the decedent knew the power lines were close to the boom. There
was no testimony that the wires were concealed or were anything
other than in plain view. There was nothing in the record to
indicate how familiar decedent was with the peril of working near
power lines with a boom.
At trial, the plaintiff presented expert testimony
suggesting that the defendant should have provided men to watch the
power lines, that the defendant could have provided safety
equipment to the decedent, and the defendant could have asked the
power company to deenergize or insulate the lines before the work
commenced. The evidence was in dispute as to whether an
alternative unloading area was available.See footnote 1
The plaintiff also presented the expert testimony of
Daniel Selby, C.P.A., who opined that the present value of economic
loss to the Harris family due to decedent's death was a gross
amount of $403,098.00.See footnote 2 Earlier in the proceedings the circuit
court granted a motion in limine made by the defendant, ruling that
any damages awarded for the future income of the decedent must
include a deduction for the amount the decedent would have
personally consumed had he lived. Plaintiff objected to this
ruling. Mr. Selby deducted 30% from the gross total and concluded
that the net loss to the beneficiaries was $282,169.00.
Defendant contends that because plaintiff asserted that
defendant had failed to warn the decedent of the existence of the
power lines in her complaint, and followed up on that assertion
during examination of witnesses and closing argument at trial, that
instruction number 11 was therefore proper. The defendant offered
and was granted instruction number 11 based upon syllabus point 2
of Jones v. Appalachian Power Co., 145 W. Va. 478, 115 S.E.2d 129
(1960):
The owner or occupant of land, who has
contracted with an independent contractor to
construct a road across such land, is not
liable for the death of an employee of such
independent contractor, caused when the boom
of a crane came into contact with an
uninsulated, 2300 volt electric wire 32 feet
above the ground, where the employees of such
independent contractor had been warned of the
presence of such wires and the wires were in
plain view.
The defendant's instruction number 11 reads:
You are also instructed that the owner of
land such as defendant Matherly Machinery
Service, Inc., who has contracted with an
independent company to deliver equipment to
its land is not liable for the death of an
employee of such independent company caused
when the boom of a crane owned by that
independent company and operated by an
employee of that company comes into contact
with an electric wire in excess of 30 feet
above the ground where the employees of such
independent company, including Troy W. Harris,
have been warned of the presence of such wires
and those wires were in plain view.
Defendant's instruction number 11 is couched in
mandatory, or binding language. The instruction states that if
decedent was warned of the presence of the wires and those wires
were in plain view, then defendant "is not liable."See footnote 3 However, it
is abundantly clear from the plaintiff's complaintSee footnote 4 and the
evidence and testimony offered through her expert, that plaintiff
was offering more than this one theory of possible negligence on
the part of defendant.See footnote 5 Yet defendant's instruction number 11
limited the jury's consideration to the lone issue of whether
defendant had breached its duty to warn.
It has been a longstanding rule in this jurisdiction that
a binding instruction must be complete in and of itself and cannot
neglect evidence of other theories asserted by a party. We
recently reiterated the general rule with regard to binding
instructions in Pino v. Szuch, 185 W. Va. 476, ___, 408 S.E.2d 55,
59-60 (1991). We stated:
We discussed at some length in Bragg v.
C.I. Whitten Transfer Co., 125 W. Va. [722] at
727, 26 S.E.2d [217] at 220 [(1943)], the
general rule with regard to a binding
instruction:
'Plaintiff's Instruction No. 6
directed the jury to find a verdict
for the plaintiff if certain
hypothetical facts were believed--in
common parlance, it was a binding
instruction. "It has been
repeatedly held that it is improper
for the court, in instructing a
jury, to single out certain facts
and instruct the jury, that if they
are true, they must find for either
of the parties in accordance with
such facts, when there are other
facts or evidence in the case
bearing on the subject." Storrs v.
Feick, 24 W. Va. 606, 613 [(1884)]'
We further explained in Bragg that a
defective binding instruction cannot be cured
by reference to other instructions: 'In other
words, a binding instruction should be so
drawn as to need no aid or supplement from
another. Resort to other instructions to
supply the necessary factual premise for the
authorized conclusion generally results in
confusing and misleading the jury.' 125
W. Va. at 728, 26 S.E.2d at 221.
In syllabus point 3 of Nesbitt v. Flaccus, 149 W.Va. 65,
138 S.E.2d 859 (1964), we stated:
A binding instruction which directs the
jury to find for a party if it believes that
certain facts therein enumerated are
established by the evidence must not omit any
fact essential to such finding, and such
instruction must be complete in itself and can
not be supplemented by other instructions
given.
In this case, defendant's instruction number 11 was
erroneously binding and therefore could not be cured by any other
instruction or by viewing the instructions as a whole. We noted
the traditional rule regarding the impact of an erroneous
instruction in syllabus point 6 of Pino:
'"An erroneous instruction is presumed to
be prejudicial and warrants a new trial unless
it appears that the complaining party was not
prejudiced by such instruction." Point 2,
syllabus, Hollen v. Linger, 151 W.Va. 255 [151
S.E.2d 330 (1966)].' Syllabus Point 5, Yates
v. Mancari, 153 W. Va. 350, 168 S.E.2d 746
(1969).
The plaintiff was prejudiced by defendant's instruction number 11
because her alternate theories of negligence, for which she offered
evidence, were excluded.
In sum, the plaintiff offered evidence of negligence on
the part of the defendant, and based her case on several theories
of negligence. It was error for the circuit court to issue a
binding instruction to the jury directing them to find for the
defendant if they determined that the defendant was not negligent
in its duty to warn the decedent of the existence of the power
lines when other theories of negligence were asserted.
Plaintiff lists a second assignment of error, that being
the circuit court's ruling that any damages for future wages of the
decedent must be reduced to reflect the decedent's future
consumption. We need not address that issue to reach a decision in
this case.See footnote 6
Based upon the foregoing, the judgment of the Circuit
Court of Raleigh County is reversed, and this case is remanded for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
unloading occurred behind defendant's establishment where no power lines were present. During that unloading (decedent was not present, but Mr. Richmond was), the yard of the private residence of the owner of Matherly Machinery, Inc., was damaged. Several employees of defendant testified that room was available in that same area to unload the second half of the crane and they expected it to be unloaded there. The owner of Matherly Machinery, Inc. testified there was no available space in the rear of the establishment.
theories of negligence, including permitting an unsafe condition to exist, failing to correct an unsafe condition, failing to properly maintain the premises, and failure to adequately oversee operations.
Plaintiff was asserting that defendant had not provided a reasonably safe place to work, a separate theory of negligence from the assertion that defendant had failed to warn decedent of the power lines.