43 Ind. App. 47 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1909
The appellee is a corporation engaged in the transmission of telegrams, and whose lines run through the city of ITammond. The South Shore Gas & Electric Company is a corporation engaged, among other things, in furnishing to the city and citizens of Hammond electric lights, and by a mutual agreement between the two companies they both used the same line of poles for their wires
The only error assigned here is the overruling of appellant’s motion for a new trial.
The court, over appellant’s objection and exception, permitted appellee to propound the following question to its witness Harrison: “You may state whether a lineman of ordinary experience and caution would undertake to carry a bare, grounded wire up a pole, the two cross arms of the pole carrying electric light wires, without using any precaution to prevent the bare, grounded wii’e’s coming in contact with
Over the objection and exception of appellant the court gave to the jury the following instructions: “(23) The defendant Postal Telegraph-Cable Company was not bound to give the plaintiff warning or notice of the fact that these wires upon the pole belonging to the South Shore Gas & Electric Company, where the plaintiff was injured, were at the time carrying a dangerous current of electricity. The presence of said company’s wires upon the pole was in itself sufficient to put the plaintiff upon inquiry as to their condition in that respect.” “(13) If there is a safe and an unsafe way, both reasonably convenient, of doing work, and an adult of ordinary understanding voluntarily, without instruction, and without asking for instructions, undei’takes to do such work, he must, at his peril, choose the safe way, and if he chooses the unsafe way and is injured, he cannot recover for such injury. ’ ’
The admission of this evidence, and the giving of these instructions, are among the reasons assigned for a new trial, and urged here as grounds for a reversal of the judgment below.
The appellee contends: (1) That whatever errors in the admission or rejection of evidence, or in the instructions given by the court to the jury, are apparent in the record, they furnish no sufficient reason for a reversal of this cause, because the answers to the interrogatories render the instructions complained of harmless, and the evidence which is in the record clearly shows that appellant had no case against the appellee; that whatever hazard there was in connection with the joint use of the telegraph .poles by both companies was open and apparent, and was known to appellant, and therefore assumed by him; (2) that the evidence clearly shows that the appellant was guilty of contributory negligence, that he could, by the exercise of his
The appellant’s action is, so far as the appellee is concerned, grounded on two alleged acts of negligence — one of commission, and the other of omission on the part of appellee. It is alleged that appellee was guilty of negligence in stringing its wires on the same pole on which electric light wires were carried; that appellee knew the electric light wires carried dangerous currents of electricity in the daytime as well as at night; that appellant was ignorant of the fact that the light wires were used in the daytime ; that appellee gave to appellant no notice or warning of the fact that the electric light wires, were charged with dangerous currents of electricity during the daytime, when appellant’s work was to be performed, and that for its failure so to notify appellant it was guilty of negligence.
In the case of Mahan v. Newton, etc., St. R. Co., supra, it appeared that the plaintiff’s intestate was killed while in the employ of an electric light company, as lineman, by a current of electricity which it was claimed came from the street railroad company’s trolley line, which was in close proximity to the light line. The action was brought by the administrator against the street railroad company, and the theory of the complaint was that the defendant was guilty of negligence in not properly guarding its line to prevent the escape of electricity to the light company’s lines. A rule of the electric light company required its employes, when engaged- in their duties, to treat every wire as a live wire, and to wear rubber gloves in handling dangerous wires. The deceased treated the wires he was handling as dead wires, and did not wear rubber gloves, and it was contended that he was guilty of contributory negligence. There was evidence that the deceased had no reason to believe that the light wires were dangerous. It was held that whether the nonobservanee of the rule to treat every wire as a live wire, under the circumstances there shown, was an act of negligence, was a question for the jury.
In the case of East Tenn. Tel. Co. v. Carmine, supra, the appellee was employed by a telephone company as a lineman. The telephone company' and .the electric light company
The case of Snyer v. New York, etc., Tel. Co., supra, is in many respects similar to the case at bar, the only distinction between the cases being in the fact that in the case cited the evidence disclosed that the electric light wires had not formerly been used in the daytime, and that the injured employe was cognizant of such fact. There, as here, the light wires were used in the daytime, and the fact was known to the master and unknown to the servant, and no notice was given by the master to the servant; and there, as here, the servant assumed that the wires were dead and harmless, and, acting upon that assumption, was injured by coming in contact with them in the performance of his work.
It does not appear in the evidence in this case that the appellant had any knowledge or information on the subject as to the time when the electric light wires on the poles were
• We think that the distinguishing circumstances between the two cases cannot be controlling.
It is the general rule that the questions whether a given hazard is assumed by the employe, and whether, in a given case, there has been contributory negligence on the part of the party injured, are for the jury, and what are proper inferences to be drawn from the facts appearing in evidence are properly for the jury, and not for the court.
In this ease the jury might very properly have inferred, from the fact that the light wires were on the pole, that the appellant knew they were designed to carry electric currents of dangerous energy, and from the subtle and mysterious character of the element, which prevented its presence being known, save by the sense of touch, that the appellant was guilty of contributory negligence in failing to treat the wires as live wires, and dangerous; and that, from his knowledge of the presence of the wires, the risk arising from dangerous currents of electricity that might be passing over them was assumed by him.
In the elaborate brief of counsel for appellant numerous other questions are discussed which will probably not arise upon another trial of the ease, and are therefore not considered.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to grant a new trial.