38 Ind. App. 607 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1906
Appellant sued for damages for a personal injury. Trial by the court, and upon a special
The only error assigned is that the court erred in the conclusion of law.
The facts found are, in substance, as follows: Erom March 20, 1903, to October 31, 1903, appellant was employed by appellee as a telegraph repair man, and it was his duty to keep the telegraph poles in proper position, the wires connected, insulated, and clear, of all obstructions, and to make all necessary repairs on the line; and, for the purpose of performing such work, he had authority to call on track and section foremen for assistance. In the discharge of his duty appellant was required to and did load and unload telegraph poles and distribute the same, dig holes for such poles, set the same, trim trees to prevent interference with wires, pull slack out of wires, put in new wires, wire the ofiices, transfer wires from old to new poles, and take down old poles and replace them with new ones. In the performance of such service appellant acted not only under his general employment but frequently upon special orders from appellee’s superintendent and train dispatchers, specifying particular work that he should do. On October 31, appellant was ordered by the train dispatcher, to whose orders appellant was subject, to take down a certain pole and transfer the wires from it to a new pole; the removal of the old pole was necessary because it obstructed a driveway being opened to an elevator on the railroad; the pole was about twenty-eight feet high, ten inches in diameter at the base, and four inches at the top, about four feet of the top being formed by a splice; it was about four or five feet higher than the average, but some other poles on the line were as high and some higher; attached to the top were two line wires and a guy wire, extending about thirty feet to a tree, and from the ground to the top were spikes extending out four or five inches called “pole steps.” The removal of the old pole and setting the new one and trans
“Care must be taken to see that men are not injured by poles’ breaking. When the last wire is removed from old poles, foremen will see that the poles are held up, either with ropes or forks, and in all eases the linemen should carry the last wire part way down the pole with him, or let it away from the pole with rope while he climbs down. The utmost care must be exercised in this matter, and no excuse will be received for failure to observe these instructions.”
Prior to his injury appellant had made a requisition upon appellee for a rope which appellee had failed to furnish. In order safely to perform the work of removing the pole it was necessary to have a rope to stay the pole, or sufficient men to hold the same up with forks, and from the apparent condition of the pole two men with forks were sufficient, but on account of the actual, hidden condition two men were not sufficient.
Judgment affirmed.