87 Kan. 604 | Kan. | 1912
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Isabella Biddle brought this action against the Leavenworth Light, Heat & Power Company and the Missouri & Kansas Telephone Company to recover damages for the death of her husbaiid. The
The appellants each attacked the petition by motion to make it more definite and certain, and upon the overruling of such motions each filed a general demurrer thereto which was also overruled. Each appellant thereupon separately answered. A j ury trial was had, special findings were made, and a general verdict against the appellants jointly for $10,000 damages was rendered. Separate motions for a new trial were made and overruled and judgment was rendered according to the verdict.
The appellants make seventy-four separate assignments of error. The number is confusing, but we will
The petition might have been made more -elaborate and definite as to certain facts to which the motions of the appellants are directed, but there was no error in overruling the motions for the reason that it is evident from the situation of the parties that the facts, claimed to be omitted were within the knowledge of the appellants rather than of the appellee. The appellants did not see fit to stand upon the adverse rulings upon the demurrers to the petition, and we think the petition liberally construed, as it should be, states a cause .of action.
The evidence and findings of the jury show that the respective wires of the telephone company and the power company were strung in the same line upon alternate poles in such manner that, when taut, the wires were only ten to twelve inches apart and that the wires of the power company were constantly charged with about 2200 volts' of electricity. It also appears that the telephone company had men constantly employed to remedy interruptions, called “troubles,” in the operation of its wires and it is apparent that such “troubles” generally could be remedied only by ascending the telephone poles, and that in so doing the men would be brought in close proximity to the charged wires of the power company; that in damp weather, such as existed at the time of the accident in question, it appears that no known insulation of a highly charged wire is a sufficient protection from injury, to any person coming in contact therewith. The evidence shows that the wires of the power company were insulated by a rubber covering, which is as perfect insulation as science and experience have developed, but that one wire, which had .sagged about five inches and caught upon a glass upon the telephone pole, had the insulation burned or rubbed off for a space of about an inch or an inch and a half.
If the jury regarded these facts, of which there was at least some evidence, as established, as from the verdict they evidently did, they were justified in finding' that each of the appellants was negligent in constructing and maintaining the wires in the relative positions described; that some such accident should have been anticipated from the situation and guarded against. The proven fact that the wires of the power company were, soon after the accident, stretched upon poles five feet higher than at the time of the accident and that the telephone wires remained upon the same poles as before is some evidence that the companies knew how to avoid the danger and knew that the previous position of the wires was dangerous.
The answer set up the defense of contributory negligence, and if there was a prima facie case of negligence on the part of the appellants the burden of proving contributory negligence on the part of the deceased devolved upon them. How the hand of the deceased happened to come in contact with the charged wire is not disclosed by the evidence. No one saw him at the moment of the accident. The contact and death were instantaneous. At the time of the accident the deceased stood with one foot upon a bolt inserted in a telephone pole and the other leg thrown over a guy wire extending from near the top of the pole to the ground, .thus making his body “grounded,”' as it is called, both through the guy wire and through the wet
The evidence shows that the deceased was an ex-' perienced man in the business in which he was engaged; that he had been in the employ of the telephone company fourteen years, four years of which he was foreman of the linemen, and had also been one year in the ■employ of the power company as an arc-light trimmer. Both instinct and reason impel every human being to self-preservation and to the avoidance of danger, and these well-known facts compel the presumption that the deceased used reasonable care to avoid injury to h'imself. And, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, this presumption was sufficient to justify the jury in finding that the deceased was not guilty of contributory negligence. It is agreed that the accident resulted from' the hand of the deceased coming in contact with a wire of the power company. The wire sagged about five inches, thus bringing it within five to seven inches of the telephone wire. When the sagging occurred is not shown otherwise than inferentially in this that the service on the telephone wires was interrupted only on the morning of the accident and unsuccessful efforts had been made by employees of the telephone company to discover the cause of the interruption. The trouble was later located in the vicinity of where the accident afterwards occurred.
By the direction of the city manager the deceased had been sent early in the afternoon to wire around the interruption so as to resume the service. Very shortly before the accident he discovered that a wire of the power company was caught under a glass on a telephone pole and he had released it. Immediately thereupon communication over the telephone wire could be resumed. He had telephoned to the office of the telephone company of the discovery of the interruption and almost immediately thereafter the shock occurred. It was primarily the duty of the power company to
It is said that the telephone company erected the poles and stretched their wires first and that the power company afterwards erected their poles and stretched their wires, and- that therefore the telephone company is not responsible for the proximity of the wire's. Each of the companies was equally entitled' to the use of the alley' for the purpose of setting its poles and stretching its wires, yet on the principle that one should s'o use his own property as not unnecessarily to injure the rights of others it could.hardly be contended that the telephone company, in view of the evident danger to its employees in the discharge of their duties, could not have prevented the power company from stringing its wires in such.close proximity to the telephone wires. And from the fact .that this was not done, the jury may have rightly inferred that the stringing and maintaining of the wires of the power company in the proximity shown was with the acquiescence and consent of the telephone company, and it was equally the fault and negligence of each that the wires were so maintained, and each was equally responsible for the injury that resulted therefrom.
The special findings of the jury and the general verdict were all in favor of the appellee and, without adverting to each objection separately, we have considered them all and believe that such special findings
The judgment is affirmed.