124 Ky. 684 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1907
Reversing.
This is an action instituted by Alice Westcott, as administratrix of Edward Westcott, deceased, to recover damages for the death of the deceased, who was her husband, from the effect of an electric shock received by him on August 21, 1905. The appellant, the Citizens’ Telephone Company, and the Union Light, Heat & Power Company, both corporations doing business in Newport, Ky., were made defendants, and charged in the petition with having, by gross negligence, caused the death of Edward Westcott. Both defendants filed answers, controverting all the material allegations of the petition, and pleading contributory negligence on the part of the decedent. These affirmative allegations of the answer were controverted by reply, and the issues thus completed. A trial resulted in a verdict against the Citizens’ Telephone Company for $15,000, and in favor of the Union Light, Heat & Power Company. Prom the judgment based upon this verdict this appeal is prosecuted.
The substantial facts are as follows: At the time of his death Edward Westcott was in the employ of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company and the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company as night gate operator, and was engaged at his business in the watchtower at the railroad crossing on Monmouth street, between Eleventh and Twelfth streets, in Newport, ICy. In the watchtower there was what is called in the record “a block signal telephone box,” which is a part of a line of railroad telephone used by the above-mentioned railroad companies for their private business, but which is owned and operated by the
Assuming for the purposes of this appeal that the crossing of the telephone with the electric wire was negligence on the part of the appellant company, is appellee, under the state of facts detailed above, entitled to recover damages for his death? The decedent was 34 years of age, and, so far as this record shows, was a man of at least ordinary intelligence, and his business indicates that he understood something of machinery and the simpler laws of natural physics. It is perfectly plain, from the uncontradicted testimony, that he was at the time of his death not engaged in any duty connected with the telephone box from which he received the fatal shock, but, on the contrary, knowing the abnormal condition with which he was confronted, he was, for his own amusement, experimenting with it as above indicated: The manner in which he made these experiments shows clearly that he appreciated the occult danger connected with his operations; and, in addition, he had been informed early in the evening that the cause of the box being charged was., that the telephone line was crossed with the electric wire, and that this condition was dangerous. John Shaw, the night operator, testified without contradiction that Westcott was present when John Scott and Irwin Zitt brought in the information that the lines were crossed on John street, and the dangerous condition resulting therefrom.
The question, then, arises: If all the evidence touching the cause of Edward Westcott’s death shows without, any sort of contradiction that he knew the dangerous condition of the telephone box, and so knowing, without any duty calling him thereto, he deliberately placed his hand on the highly charged
The sum total of plaintiff’s evidence, so far as appellant is concerned, is that the decedent was killed by coming in contact with' one of its boxes which had
The judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent herewith.
Petition for rehearing by appellee overruled.