193 Iowa 536 | Iowa | 1922
— On or about the 17th day of September, 1919, appellee’s intestate, Charles M. Cawley, was employed by the intervener, the Western Electric Telephone System, as a lineman, one of his duties being to discover and repair broken telephone wires. The situation regarding the place of- the accident in question is more readily understood by reference to the accompanying plat.
;It will be observed therefrom that the two streets Maple Drive and Louisiana Avenue intersect, each other at an acute angle. Eastward from the junction of said streets lies what is known as the Portland or Nora Springs Road. The appellant company carried, a transmission line upon its poles, extending along the southwesterly side of Maple Drive, and eastward on the south side of the Portland or Nora Springs Road. .It also had a lead of wires coming from the north on the west side of Louisiana Avenue, and these wires were carried across Maple Drive to the pole on the south side thereof, and thence to the eastward.
As originally constructed, the appellant’s line coming from the north, on the west side of Louisiana Avenue, terminated at the pole near the angle formed by the union of Louisiana Avenue and Maple Drive. ' It consisted of two wires on one ■ cross-arm. These wires were known as secondary wires, and Carried a- voltage of 110 volts. In 1915, the appellant extended said wires across and over Maple Drive, and attached them to ohe of its poles on the south side of Maple Drive, and then carried them eastward along the south side of'the Portland or Nora Springs Eoad. Thereafter, a current of 2,300 volts was carried .on these wires.
The poles of the telephone company at and near the junction of Maple Drive and Louisiana Avenue are all 30-foot poles, placed five or five and a half feet in the ground. The poles of the appellant on the west side of Louisiana Avenue were also 30-foot poles, except the last one on the north side of Maple Drive, which was a 35-foot pole, as was also the one' oii 'the opposite or south side of Maple Drive. The distance' betweén the pole on the appellant’s line immediately north of Maple Drive and the pole immediately south of Maple Drive is 82% feet. The distance between the pole of the telephone company, No. 25?, immediately east of Louisiana Avenue,' and pole No. 258, immediately west of Louisiana Avenue, is 74%' feet.
On the day of the accident, trouble was reported on the lines of the telephone company, and the appellee’s intestate, with-another employee of the telephone company, one Miller, went out in search of the trouble.-. Another employee' of the'telephone company, however, had previously' arrived at the intersection, of Louisiana Avenue and Maple Drive, and there discovered that one of the wires of the telephone company extending over Louisiana Avenue between said poles Nos. 257 and 258 had been broken. This was the wire that was fastened to the top croSs-arm, and was on the third pin from the north. This em
It also appears from the evidence that this wire of the appellant sagged at the time of the accident, and that when it was drawn taut, the distance between it and the wire of the telephone company at the place of contact was 14% inches.
There was no showing in the record that Cawley knew that the current in appellant’s wires had been changed from a voltage of 110 to one of 2,300. The evidence shows that a voltage of 110 is comparatively harmless, but that a voltage of 2,300 is dangerous. The evidence also tends to show that the method employed by Cawley to repair the broken wire was the ordinary and usual one employed for said purpose.
No hard and fast rule can be adopted in a matter of this kind. Decisions on the question of excessive verdicts are of little value as precedents, because of the obvious fact of a lack of similarity, especially in details, between any two cases. Under all of the facts and circumstances disclosed by the record, we are of the opinion that the amount of damages awarded in the instant case is too large, and should be reduced. We are strongly of the opinion that the size of the verdict was influenced somewhat by the introduction of improper evidence. We shall discuss this in a later division of this opinion, and require a reduction of the amount of damages.
II. The court gave the following instruction to the jury:
2. Negligence: acts constituting : universal rule of care. “You are instructed that it was the duty of the defendant, People’s Gas and Electric Company, to construct, maintain, and operate its electric line with due regard to the rights, safety, and comfort of others who may rightfully come in proximity thereto. It may, if it chooses, establish and carry on a business which is inherently dangerous, or it may, for business purposes, employ or use an agency or power which is a source of peril to others rightfully within its vicinity, but just in proportion to the danger so created, must care and diligexxee be increased, to keep such instrumentality or agency under control and safeguarded so as to prevent injury therefrom to others who rightfully and in the course of their duties come in proximity thereto. ’ ’
Appellant’s first claim is that this instruction, by its express terms, required appellant to have consideration for the rights, safety, and comfort of anyone who might be in the vicinity of the lixxes of the appellant.-It is argued that there are people who are “uxxcomfortable” in the presence of any electrical device or line, no xnatter how well the same may be protected or
It is also urged that the instruction is erroneous because of the reference to the use of an agency or power “which is a source of peril to others rightfully within its vicinity.” It is argued that this expression was too “highly colored.” The instruction did not place upon the appellant any higher degree of care than is required under the law. It must be conceded that courts and lawyers almost unconsciously frequently use the terms “highest degree of care,” “extraordinary care,” “great degree of care,” and other similar expressions. In its last analysis, there is, strictly speaking, but one degree of care in negligence cases, and that is the degree of care which a man of ordinary Care and prudence would exercise under the same or similar circumstances. A man driving a high-powered automobile can, in a sense, be said to be required to use a “higher degree” of care than a man engaged in driving a perfectly safe and well broken team of horses; but the standard is really the same, — that is, each is required to use the degree of care that an ordinarily prudent and cautious man would use in and about the particular thing. A man handling dynamite may quite properly be said to be held to “extraordinary” care, while a man handling cordwood might be said to be held to “ordinary” care; but the distinction is really one without a difference. It is in a large measure a mere use (or perhaps misuse) of terms. The man handling dynamite is held to the care which an ordinarily prudent and cautious man would exercise in handling dynamite, and,a man handling cordwood is held to the degree of care that a man of ordinary care and prudence would exercise in the business of handling cordwood. So that it is essentially correct to say that a man handling a dangerous instrumentality like gunpowder, dynamite, or electricity is held to that high degree of care which a man of ordinary care and prudence would exercise in the business of handling such known dangerous instrumentality.
It was proper for the court to tell the jury that it should take into consideration the character of the instrumentality the appellant was using, and hold the appellant to the degree of
The instruction is not subject to the criticism lodged against it. The instructions must be read together, and construed as a whole; and when this is done, there was no error in this instruction of which the appellant can complain. As bearing on the subject, see Scott v. Iowa Tel. Co., 126 Iowa 524; Knowlton v. Des Moines Edison Lt. Co., 117 Iowa 451; Martin v. Des Moines Edison Lt. Co., 131 Iowa 724; Toney v. Interstate Power Co., 180 Iowa 1362; Graves v. Interstate Power Co., 189 Iowa 227; Evans v. Oskaloosa Trac. & Lt. Co., 192 Iowa 1.
‘ ‘ If you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant company, at the time in question, maintained its high-voltage wires at the crossing in question without sufficient clearance over and above the wires of said Western Electric Telephone System at said place, so as to make it dangerous to employees of said Western Electric Telephone System while repairing its wires at said crossing, and if such condition was known to the defendant, or could have been known by the exercise of reasonable care and inspection, and if the said Charles M. Cawley, when engaged in making such repairs on the wires of the Western Electric Telephone System at said point, received an electric "shock from which he died, and without any negligence on his part contributing of such injury, then, in that event, the plaintiff is entitled to recover herein.”
It is argued that this instruction placed upon the appellant the duty to maintain a safe place for the deceased to work;, that there was no'relation of master and servant between the appellant and deceased; and that the instruction was, therefore, erroneous.
The instruction is not fairly susceptible of the construction
“And when the lighting wire is supported on poles which support other electrical wires, which must be attended to by linemen of other companies, the company operating the lighting-wire is bound to know that there is danger of such linemen coming 'in contact with the lighting wire and being injured thereby, if it is not properly insulated, and it will be negligent if it fails to use proper precautions against injury to such linemen of other companies [citing cases].”
We also discussed the matter at length in Toney v. Interstate Power Co., supra. See, also, as bearing on the subject, Evans v. Oskaloosa Trac. & Lt. Co., supra; McAdam v. Central B. (& Elec. Co., 67 Conn. 445 (35 Atl. 341); Brooks v. Consolidated Gas Co., 70 N. J. L. 211 (57 Atl. 396). .
IY. Complaint is made of Instructions 5 and 6, the particular matter complained of being the portions of said instructions wherein the court defined the liability of'the appellant for negligence, if it knew, or by the exercise of reasonable cafe and inspection could have known, of the insufficient clearance between the wires. It is argued that these instructions imposed upon the appellant a duty to inspect, and that no such issue was raised by the pleadings. We are cited to authorities sustaining the proposition that a case must be tried on the issues made in the pleadings, and that matters cannot be considered, in order to fix a liability, which are not pleaded. This rule is too familiar and elementary to be debated, but the instructions complained of are not subject to the criticism that they offended against the rule. No fair construction of the language of the instructions
V. Complaint is made of the giving of Instruction No. 9, in which the court told the jury:
4' OTnuibuto?y‘ p}eaceStSCRnown dansel‘ ‘•‘You are further instructed that a workman has no right to work at a place which is obviously dangerous, and, if he does so, he takes the risks which are naturally incident to such a situation; but the mere fact, if it be a tact, that said Charles M. Cawley may have known that the place in question was dangerous, if he did so know, would not, of itself, deprive the plaintiff of the right to recover, if, in point of fact, the injury resulted from the negligence of the defendant, and if said Cawley, while on said pole and making repairs on the wire of the Western Electric Telephone System at the time and place‘in question, exercised such care and caution as a man of ordinary care and prudence in his calling would exercise under like circumstances; and although he may have thought there was danger, yet, if the danger was not such as to threaten immediate injury to him, or if he might have reasonably supposed that he could safely work on said pole at said time and place in repairing said telephone wire, by the use of reasonable care and caution, then he cannot be said to have been guilty of contributory negligence, if in so doing’ he did, in fact, exercise reasonable care and caution for his own safety.”
We do not think this instruction is subject to the criticisms made by the appellant. It is particularly urged that the court in this instruction used the expression that the decedent wras required to exercise “such care and caution as a man in Ms Galling would exercise under like circumstances.” Appellant’s argument is that a particular class of workmen, by reason of familiarity with the danger which they encounter, are liable to
We do not so regard it. As we have before stated, the degree of care required is that of an ordinarily careful and prudent man in doing the thing in hand; but certainly, an “ordinarily careful and prudent” man means one in the situation of the injured party in all respects. The degree of care required of a blind man on the street is the degree of care of an ordinarily careful and prudent man who is blind. The degree of care required of a child of tender years is the degree of care of an ordinarily careful and prudent person of such years and experience. So the degree of care required of a lineman on a telephone pole is the deg'ree of care of an ordinarily careful and prudent man who is a lineman. If the decedent had been a novice in the business, he would have been held to the degree of care of an ordinarily careful and prudent man who was wholly inexperienced. In the instant case, he was held properly to the degree of care which an ordinary man of care and prudence in his calling would exercise under like circumstances. Appellant is certainly in no position to complain of this instruction.
It is also urged that this instruction is erroneous because the court told the jury that, if the decedent “might have reasonably supposed that he could safely work on said pole at said time and place in repairing1 said telephone wire, then he cannot be said to be guilty of contributory negligence, if in so doing he did, in fact, exercise reasonable care and caution for his own safety.” The complaint is that the court left it for the jury to determine what was in the mind of the decedent as to whether he “reasonably supposed that he could safely work on the pole,” and that this is not the true test.
We think that the construction placed upon the instruction by appellant is unwarranted and hypercritical. The instruction must be read as a whole. It is particularly stated therein that it was for the jury to determine whether the decedent reasonably supposed that he could safely work, by the use of “reasonable care and caution;” and that he would not be guilty of contributory negligence if he did “in fact exercise reasonable care and.caution for his own safety.” Reading the instruction
"Moreover, even if she had known of the condition of the walk, it would not have been contributory negligence, as a matter of law, for her to take that route, unless she knew and appreciated the fact that it was imprudent for her to do so. She may have know that the way was icy and slippery; yet, if she reasonably believed that, by using care, she could make the passage in safety, she was not negligent. ’ ’
This is the true rule.
VI. The court instructed the jury fully in regard to the consideration of expert testimony, and in the course of said instruction, used the following phrase:
5' ion.1 evidence^111 instructions. "Expert testimony is most useful in cases of conflict between witnesses, as corroborating testimony. The value of such testimony depends upon the circumstances of each case, and of these circumstances the jury must be the judge. ’ ’
This excerpt from the instruction had better have been omitted, but we do not think it constituted reversible error t.o give it. The proposition ■ of law therein contained is not erroneous.
The next succeeding clause of the instruction was as follows:
"When expert witnesses testify to matters of fact, from personal knowledge, then their testimony as to such facts within their personal knowledge should be considered the same as that of any other witnesses who testify from personal knowledge.”
The preceding portions of the instruction clearly advised the jury in regard to expert testimony, and that it was for them to determine how much weight should be given it. The instruction was not inconsistent with the general instruction to the jury that it was the sole judge of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given their testimony. The exceptions urged are not well taken.
VII. The statement in the nineteenth instruction that "alleged verbal statements or admissions should be received with great caution” is complained of. The instruction was a
Under Section 2477-m6, Paragraph b, of Code Supplement, 1913, provision is made whereby an employer who is held liable for damages under the Workmen’s Compensation Act “shrill be subrogated to the rights of the employee to recover therefor.” In Evans v. Oskaloosa Trac. & Lt. Co., supra, and Fidelity & Cas. Co. v. Cedar Valley Elec. Co., 187 Iowa 1014, we recognized the right of an employer to intervene in an action between the representative of the employee and a party charged with the wrongful injury or death. This appears to be fully warranted, under the statute. It may be proper practice that such 'intervention should be made after verdict, but there is no prohibition in the statute against the employer intervening at a prior stage in the proceeding. The evidence of the amount of the award under the Workmen’s Compensation Act is not a proper matter for the consideration of the jury, and, as stated by the court in its instruction, the jury has nothing whatever to do therewith, in determining the liability of the appellant or the amount of damages that should be awarded.
The appellant’s objections to the testimony as to the amount of the compensation that had been awarded under the Workmen’s Compensation Act should have been sustained.
The instruction in question was given for the evident purpose of attempting to cure the error in the admission of this testimony. There may be cases where an error in the admission of improper evidence is cured by an instruction to the jury to wholly disregard the same. That was what was sought to be done by the court in the instant case; but it is a matter of common knowledge and experience that evidence of such a character, when once brought to the attention of the jury, does frequently have its effect upon a verdict, notwithstanding the admonition of the court to disregard the same. It is an exceedingly difficult matter for a court to determine whether or not error in the admission of such improper testimony is cured by ,an instruction of this character. In some cases, it undoubtedly is, and in such a case, a reversal because of the admission of such testimony, when such an instruction, is given, would be wholly unwarranted. It is equally true that, in other cases, the admis
X. Error is predicated upon' the refusal of the court to give certain instructions requested by the appellant. The subject-matter of these requested instructions, where pertinent, was covered by the instructions that were given by the court. We have examined them with care, and find no error in the refusal to grant any of the same that would warrant interference on our part.
The record satisfies us that this evidence was proper re
Upon the record, the objection interposed to this testimony was not well taken. The appellee had a right to meet in rebuttal the evidence offered by the appellant. We think the testimony complained of went no further than this, and was admissible. ■
Except in the particulars heretofore pointed out, we find no error in this record requiring any interference on our part, and the judgment of the trial court is, therefore, — Affirmed on condition.