LeClaire v. Blackstone

USCA1 Opinion









[Not for Publication]

United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
____________________


No. 96-1166

WILLIAM LECLAIRE AND MICHELLE LECLAIRE,

Plaintiffs, Appellants,

v.

BLACKSTONE VALLEY ELECTRIC COMPANY,

Defendant, Appellee.


____________________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

[Hon. Ernest C. Torres, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

____________________

Before

Selya, Circuit Judge, _____________
Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
and Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________

____________________


Mark L. Smith for appellants. _____________
James A. Ruggieri with whom Higgins, Cavanagh & Cooney was on _________________ __________________________
brief for appellee.

____________________

December 18, 1996
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STAHL, Circuit Judge. Plaintiffs-appellants STAHL, Circuit Judge. _____________

William and Michelle Leclaire commenced this diversity action

against defendant-appellee Blackstone Valley Electric Company

("BVE") alleging negligence that led to injuries from

electrocution.1 Leclaire appeals the district court's grant

of BVE's motion for judgment as a matter of law and its

denial of his motion for new trial. Addressing each ruling

in turn, we affirm.

I. I. __

Judgment As a Matter of Law Judgment As a Matter of Law ___________________________

At the close of Leclaire's case in chief, the

district court granted BVE's motion for judgment as a matter

of law, pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a). The court ruled

that Leclaire failed to offer evidence from which a jury

could reasonably find that BVE's alleged negligence caused

Leclaire's injuries. On appeal, Leclaire presses his

contention that a jury could reasonably find that BVE




____________________

1. For simplicity, and because Michelle Leclaire's claims
are derivative of those of William Leclaire, we refer to the
appellants collectively as "Leclaire."
We note also that Leclaire initially joined E.W.
Audet & Sons, Inc. ("Audet"), originally a party-defendant,
in this appeal. Leclaire conceded at oral argument before
this court, however, that he failed to produce evidence to
establish any negligence on the part of Audet. Accordingly,
on November 8, 1996, we ordered this appeal dismissed as to
Audet. While the case proceeds as to BVE only, Audet is
entitled to costs on appeal pursuant to Fed. R. App. P. 39.













negligently installed an electrical wire, leading to the

accident which caused his injuries.

A. Standard of Review ______________________

We review de novo the grant of a motion for __ ____

judgment as a matter of law. Andrade v. Jamestown Hous. _______ _______________

Auth., 82 F.3d 1179, 1186 (1st Cir. 1996); Bates v. Shearson _____ _____ ________

Lehman Bros., Inc., 42 F.3d 79, 81 (1st Cir. 1994). The __________________

motion is properly granted when the evidence and inferences

reasonably drawn therefrom, viewed most favorably to the non-

movant, permit only one reasonable conclusion. Resare v. ______

Raytheon Co., 981 F.2d 32, 34 (1st Cir. 1992). In this ____________

analysis, "we may not consider the credibility of witnesses,

resolve conflicts in testimony, or evaluate the weight of the

evidence." Wagenmann v. Adams, 829 F.2d 196, 200 (1st Cir. _________ _____

1987).

Nevertheless, the non-movant's evidence "must

comprise more than fragmentary tendrils: a mere scintilla of

evidence is not enough to forestall a [judgment as a matter

of law], especially on a claim or issue as to which the

burden of proof belongs to the objecting party." Fashion _______

House, Inc. v. K mart Corp., 892 F.2d 1076, 1088 (1st Cir. ___________ ____________

1989). The non-movant "may not rely on conjecture or

speculation, rather the evidence offered must make the

`existence of the fact to be inferred more probable than its

nonexistence.'" Richmond Steel, Inc. v. Puerto Rican Am. ____________________ ________________



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Ins. Co., 954 F.2d 19, 22 (1st Cir. 1992) (quoting Carlson v. ________ _______

American Safety Equip. Corp., 528 F.2d 384, 386 (1st Cir. ____________________________

1976)).

With these principles in mind, we review the trial

evidence in the light most favorable to Leclaire.

B. Facts _________

On April 27, 1994, William Leclaire sustained

severe injuries when a piece of aluminum coil that he was

holding struck an aerial primary-distribution wire carrying

some 8000 volts of electricity. At the time of the accident,

Leclaire, an experienced vinyl and aluminum siding installer,

was applying aluminum trim to a three-story residential

building on Chester Street in Woonsocket, Rhode Island. He

was working on an aluminum staging unit that he had erected

in order to reach the top story. The staging unit, which

Leclaire had placed approximately one foot from the front of

the house, extended approximately fifty-six inches in the

direction of several wires attached to two utility poles.

Working from right to left along the front of the

house, Leclaire, without incident, installed beneath the roof

line two segments of aluminum trim, each approximately nine-

feet six-inches in length. He was situated near the left

side of the house when the accident occurred. As he turned

to install the third and last segment, the aluminum trim came

into contact with the primary-distribution electrical wire,



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the top wire running between the two poles. The ensuing

electrical shock threw Leclaire some twenty-five feet to the

ground, leaving him with a broken back and severe burns.

BVE had upgraded the electrical service in the

Chester Street area in late 1987 or early 1988. The upgrade

project included the installation of new utility poles and

hardware to which several electrical wires were to be

attached. BVE's engineering department provided the

specifications to its installation subcontractor for the

placement of the primary distribution wire. For the upgrade

project, BVE's design operated under the accepted standards

of the National Electrical Safety Code, which required that

wires such as the primary distribution wire be placed at

least five feet (sixty inches) from buildings.

At the time of the upgrade, a wooden device called

a "cross-arm," attached to the top of a utility pole, could

have provided extra clearance between the wires and the

adjacent structures. Although the upgrade specifications did

not call for the use of a cross-arm, BVE's engineering

department would, on occasion, authorize a deviation from its

usual specification to allow for a cross-arm in order to

satisfy the five-foot standard. The specifications did

authorize the use of a special "MIF" bracket, if necessary,

in order to meet the five-foot standard.





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Following the accident, Robert Mowry, a BVE crew

chief, located a burn mark on the wire, across from the left

side of the house, where the aluminum trim segment had come

into contact with it. Mowry found the distance from the burn

mark to the point of the house closest to the wire to be

sixty inches. At a later date, James O. Corriveau, a witness

for Leclaire, measured the distance from the wire to the

house at both the extreme right and left sides of the house

front. Corriveau found that the wire was "roughly around"

fifty-three to fifty-four inches from the right side, and

"around sixty-two inches, somewheres around there" from the

left.2

Leclaire's expert witness, Donald W. Zipse,

testified that because the wire failed to meet the five-foot

standard on the right side of the house, the wire was not

safely installed. Zipse conceded, however, that at each

point where the wire was five feet or more from the house, it

did satisfy the clearance standard. Zipse further testified

that, in 1987 or 1988, he had on one occasion installed an

insulated version of an aerial primary distribution wire

similar to the one on Chester Street. He did not testify

why, when or where he used the insulated wire, nor did he



____________________

2. Corriveau also testified that, at the extreme left-hand
side of the house, the wire was some forty inches below the
roof line.

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explain under what circumstances insulated wires would or

should be used.

C. Discussion ______________

At trial, Leclaire attempted to establish that

BVE's placement of the electrical wire violated the five-foot

clearance standard of the National Electrical Safety Code.

On the Rule 50(a) motion, the district court found that the

only evidence tending to show that BVE had failed to meet any

applicable standard of care was the clearance shortfall

located on the right side of the house, well away from the

contact point between the aluminum strip and the wire. The

uncontroverted evidence established, however, that the

distance between the house and the contact point was five

feet. Because Leclaire did not prove that the failure to

meet the clearance standard at a different point caused the

accident, the court granted BVE's motion for judgment as a

matter of law.

Upon careful review of the record, we agree that

there is no evidence from which a jury could rationally find,

by a preponderance of the evidence, that the failure to meet

the clearance standard at the right side of the house caused

or contributed to the accident at the left, where the

standard was shown to have been satisfied. The absence of

such evidence precludes Leclaire from prevailing on a

negligence claim based on a violation of the clearance



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standard. See Radcliffe v. Haun, 593 So. 2d 824, 826 (La. ___ _________ ____

Ct. App. 1992) (finding no evidence of causation where

electric company's power-line clearance infractions occurred

at points other than plaintiff's location when he was

injured), writ denied, 599 So. 2d 313 (La. 1992); see also ____ ______ ___ ____

Kennedy v. Tempest, 594 A.2d 385, 388 (R.I. 1991) (explaining _______ _______

that a plaintiff in a negligence action must establish not

only duty and breach, "but also that the defendant's

negligence was the proximate cause of the plaintiff's

injury"); Schenck v. Roger Williams Gen. Hosp., 382 A.2d 514, _______ _________________________

517 (R.I. 1977) (explaining that a verdict for plaintiff in

negligence action absent competent evidence establishing a

causal connection would only "be based on conjecture and

speculation").

Leclaire does not dispute this conclusion as a

matter of law or logic; he argues, instead, that the jury was

free to disregard Mowry's testimony that the clearance at the

point of contact was sixty inches. It is clear, however,

that in the context of a Rule 50(a) motion, "a bare assertion

that the opposing party's uncontroverted evidence might be

disbelieved is insufficient to resist judgment as a matter of

law on an issue as to which the party resisting judgment

bears the burden of proof." Favorito v. Pannell, 27 F.3d ________ _______

716, 721 (1st Cir. 1994) (upholding grant of Rule 50(a)

motion where non-movant "relied entirely on the totally



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unsupported speculation that a jury might disbelieve [a

witness's] uncontroverted testimony"). This rule has no less

application where, as here, the party resisting judgment

introduced the uncontroverted evidence.

In a related vein, Leclaire asserts that, on a

motion for judgment as a matter of law, the district court

must consider only evidence favorable to him, and thus, it

should have disregarded entirely Mowry's testimony

establishing the five-foot clearance at the point of the burn

mark. Leclaire's argument misconstrues the law. While the

district court (and this court on review) must view the

evidence in the light most favorable to the non-movant, the

analysis does not necessitate the complete disregard of

uncontroverted evidence that happens to be unfavorable to

that party. See Layne v. Vinzant, 657 F.2d 468, 472 (1st ___ _____ _______

Cir. 1981) ("[W]hile, on a defendant's motion [for judgment

as a matter of law], it is axiomatic that the evidence is to

be viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the

`field of vision' encompasses, to a degree, uncontradicted

evidence introduced by the defense.").3

____________________

3. Leclaire cites Samuels v. Hood Yacht Sys. Corp., 70 F.3d _______ ______________________
150, 152-53 (1st Cir. 1995), to support his claim that he
should not be bound by his witness's unfavorable testimony.
In Samuels, plaintiffs' witness testified ambivalently both _______
in favor of and adverse to the plaintiffs' case Id. at 152. ___
We reversed the district court's directed verdict, explaining
that the plaintiffs "were not bound by their expert's
reversal," but rather, "a witness may be believed in part and
disbelieved in part . . . [w]here [the witness] was self-

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In the alternative to his argument that the jury

could disbelieve Mowry's testimony, Leclaire highlights

evidence that, he claims, reasonably conflicts with the five-

foot measurement. Specifically, Leclaire asserts that

because the wire was short of the standard on the right side,

but exceeded the standard on the left, the jury could have

found that the distance from the contact point was less than

five feet. We disagree. Leclaire presented only rough

measurements coupled with his approximate location (as he

held the nine-foot six-inch aluminum trim segment), some two-

thirds down towards the left side of the house, at the time

of the accident. He did not provide, with any specificity, a

measurement of the burn mark location as between the right

and left sides of the house. Finally, he introduced no

testimony to assist the jury in making any mathematical

calculation to support the asserted fact. A jury finding

cannot be based on this type of unguided reasoning, and on

this state of the evidence, a jury could not reasonably find

that the wire was less than five feet from the house at the

point of contact.

Leclaire finally argues that the jury could have

found that BVE breached a duty independent of the clearance

standard. To this end, he asserts that "common sense"

____________________

contradictory." Id. at 152, 153 (citation omitted). The ___
absence of such self-contradiction here renders Samuels _______
inapposite.

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dictates that BVE should have foreseen that the Chester

Street residence would require periodic maintenance such as

siding, and thus, BVE should have insulated the primary

distribution wire, or placed the wire farther from the

building. The evidence presented, however, would not support

a finding of negligence on this theory.

Under Rhode Island law, it is well-established that

"a reasonable and legitimate inference that someone was

negligent is not necessarily warranted by the mere happening

of an accident." Montouri v. Narragansett Elec. Co., 418 ________ ______________________

A.2d 5, 9 (R.I. 1980). Rather, the plaintiff must produce

sufficient, competent evidence of the essential elements of a

negligence claim, including the defendant's duty to the

plaintiff and the breach of that duty. See id. at 9-10; ___ ___

Radigan v. W.J. Halloran Co., 196 A.2d 160, 163 (R.I. 1963) _______ _________________

("In every instance before negligence can be predicated of a

given act, back of the act must be sought and found a duty to

the individual complaining, the observance of which duty

would have averted or avoided the injury" (quotation and

citation omitted)). While Rhode Island courts recognize that

companies distributing electricity must exercise great care

in their operations, see Rott v. Blackstone Valley Gas & ___ ____ _______________________

Elec. Co., 106 A.2d 251, 255 (1954), the evidence presented _________

must be sufficient to allow a finding that BVE failed to

exercise such a degree of caution in this case.



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Leclaire did not produce evidence sufficient to

prove that BVE negligently failed to insulate the primary

distribution wire. In Rhode Island "there is no absolute

duty to insulate wires carrying electricity." Rott, 106 A.2d ____

at 254. In Rott, the plaintiff claimed that he informed the ____

electric company that high tension wires were interfering

with a construction project, but the company took no steps to

diminish the danger. Id. at 253. The court held that, under ___

the alleged facts, a duty to insulate high tension wires

could arise "by reason of special circumstances" of which the

defendant had knowledge. Id. at 254. Here, no such ___

circumstances were shown. Leclaire did not show that BVE had

knowledge of his siding project on Chester Street; indeed,

Leclaire admitted that, although he had previously informed

electric companies when wires interfered with his work, he

failed to do so here. Moreover, as indicated above, the

expert Zipse's unembellished testimony that he once used an

insulated wire in 1987 or 1988 is utterly unhelpful in this

regard.

Leclaire also failed to show that BVE violated some

duty to place the wire farther away from the Chester Street

residence. The evidence that special brackets or cross-arms

were available to satisfy the five-foot clearance standard

does nothing to prove that BVE violated a duty to exceed that ______

standard through the use of those alternatives. No witness



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opined that the five-foot standard was inadequate, nor was

there evidence even hinting at what a specific "appropriate"

distance from the house would have been. On the contrary,

abundantly clear from the record is Leclaire's attempt to

establish negligence based on the violation of the five-foot

standard. We are unpersuaded by his endeavor to fashion a

different theory of negligence from the evidence.

II. II. ___

Motion For a New Trial Motion For a New Trial ______________________

Leclaire appeals the district court's denial of his

motion for a new trial, purportedly sought under the

authority of Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(c)(2). He advances no

arguments other than those which we have already found

unavailing. Thus, assuming but not deciding that a Rule

50(c)(2) motion for new trial will lie where, as here, a case

has not gone to the jury,4 we find no abuse of discretion in

the district court's denial of the motion.

III. III. ____

Conclusion Conclusion __________

For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the

district court is affirmed.

Costs to appellees. Costs to appellees. ___________________

____________________

4. The advisory committee's note to the 1963 amendment of
Rule 50 suggests that relief under subsection (c)(2) is
limited to a verdict-winner who loses on a renewed motion for ______________
judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 50 advisory
committee's note.

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