24 Or. 276 | Or. | 1893
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court:
This is an action to recover damages for a personal injury alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant in permitting its wire to come in contact with an electric wire, whereby it became heavily charged with electricity, and in allowing such wire to hang down so near the ground at the. corner of K and Twenty-first Streets as to endanger the life and limb of those traveling upon such streets. The errors assigned relate to the refusal of the trial court to grant a nonsuit, and to certain instructions given and refused. Upon the first point the conten
The principal ground of complaint remains, howeverj to be considered. This is, was the negligence of the defendant the proximate cause of the injury? There are some other minor questions suggested by way of criticism upon the charge of the court, but the remoteness of defendant’s acts, and the intervention of other agencies directly contributing to plaintiff’s injury are relied upon as the chief defense. It was the failure of the court, as indicated by the instructions given and refused, to properly apply the law in this regard, that constitutes the main grievance of the defendant. To comprehend the force of this objection, we must first know and understand the facts.
The plaintiff is a laboring man, and was employed by the gas company to shovel coal into its furnace. On the day of the accident he quit work after five o’clock P. M. and started for his home, but on his way went to market, made some purchases, and went out G Street to Twenty-first, and when passing down that street, near the corner of K, he slipped on the sidewalk, and fell on his elbow, his hat falling off, and the packages which he carried flying out of his hands. After he got up he groped for his packages and hat, when his hand rubbed against a wire, one end of which was hanging down over the sidewalk at the intersection of the street. His testimony on this point is: “My hand rubbed against this wire, grasp
It appears from the instructions that the theory of the law as applied to the facts by the trial court was that it
The record discloses that the electric-light company gave the defendant permission to use its poles upon which to string its wire when the defendant needed them to connect its wire to a residence where it had no poles. When the defendant disconnected its wire from the telephone at the Bates residence, it had no longer any need to use the electric poles, and the permission or license given to use them ceased, or was at an end, and necessarily the defendant ought to have removed its wire from the electric poles; and if it did not do so, but coiled and hung it on one of them, where it had no right to be, the defendant was bound to look after it, and to expect, if it failed to do so, that the electric company would remove it when such wire incommoded that company, or its business required the removal of its poles as did happen. The jury found that the
But this phase of the case is met with the argument that the telephone wire itself is not dangerous, and that the main or efficient cause of the injury was the electric current from the wires of the electric companies, with the production of which the defendant had nothing to do. In other words, that if the defendant was negligent, it was
Rehearing
On Rehearing.
[S. C. 35 Pac. 549.]
Lord delivered the opinion of the court:
The suspended telephone wire, while it was charged with electricity from contact with the electric wire, was not less dangerous than the electric wire itself would have been similarly suspended as to the street. It was this condition of affairs that led the court in its charge to refer to electricity generally as a “subtle and dangerous agency” which required the “utmost caution to control.” As the telephone wire was liable to become charged with such dangerous agent, and thus to become dangerous to the travelling public, the duty of inspecting and ascertaining the condition of the wires, and whether there was any interference making them more dangerous than they otherwise would be, was necessarily involved. In view of these circumstances, the degree of care imposed was commensurate with the danger. “ Due care is a degree of care corresponding to the danger involved”: Cooley, Torts.
These instructions, taken in connection with the instructions referred to in the main opinion, we think fairly present the law governing the case. Affirmed.