161 Mass. 558 | Mass. | 1894
The exceptions in this case as amended were allowed by the presiding justice of the Superior Court, if it was within his authority and discretion to allow them, otherwise they were disallowed. The original draft of the exceptions was filed on February 20, 1892, within the time allowed. In
The excepting party has a right, if he chooses, to stand upon his exceptions as originally filed, and to prove the truth of them if they are not allowed. The extent to which errors in such exceptions can be corrected on a petition to prove the exceptions was considered in Morse v. Woodworth, 155 Mass. 233. The extent to which the presiding justice can allow the excepting party to amend his bill of exceptions has not been determined. In such a case as this, where many questions of law were raised at the trial, one of which was that upon all the evidence the plaintiff could not recover, it is hardly possible that the original draft of the exceptions, without any change, would be entirely acceptable to either the presiding justice or to the other party. The other party under the statute has a right to be heard upon the allowance of the exceptions, and the practice has been to permit the excepting party, if he chooses, with the consent of the presiding justice, to amend his exceptions so as to state more accurately and completely the questions of law which were raised at the trial and included in the bill of exceptions as filed. It is true that the presiding justice is not required by law to allow any such amendments, but his power to allow amendments is undoubted. Perry v. Breed, 117 Mass. 155. They cannot be allowed without the consent of the excepting party, but with his consent they can be, certainly so far as is necessary
We have no occasion to consider in this case whether a distinct exception taken at the trial and omitted from the bill as filed by accident or mistake can be added by an amendment to the original draft after the time has expired for filing exceptions. In the present bill we think that the amendments allowed by the presiding justice, with the consent of the defendant, were such as were within his power and discretion to allow.
The plaintiff was a lineman of the New England Telegraph and Telephone Company, and went upon the roof of the building No. 41 Temple Place, Boston, called the Youth’s Companion building, for the purpose of affixing a telephone wire to a standard erected upon the roof of the building No. 45 Temple Place, which adjoined No. 41 on the side toward Washington Street. It was intended that this wire should run from West Street to this standard, and thence should swerve slightly toward Washington Street and pass across Temple Place. He was injured while on the roof of No. 41 by his left hand coming in contact with a wire belonging to the defendant, through which an alternating electric light current was being transmitted. This electric light wire ran over the southeasterly corner of the building on which he was, and at the point where the plaintiff’s hand came in contact with it was about twenty-five feet from the corner. The wire formed one side of an alternating electric light circuit, the other wire of the circuit running parallel with it and at a distance of seventeen and a half inches from it. No wires of any kind were attached to the roof of No. 41 Temple Place, and the roof was clean, smooth, and unobstructed by anything except a scuttle near the back part of it, a skylight near where the plaintiff fell, and two or three other skylights near the rear of the roof. The roof of the building No. 45 Temple Place was about twenty feet below the roof of the building No. 41, and each was a flat, or nearly flat roof. Near the centre of the roof of No. 45, the defendant, which is a corporation engaged in the business of furnishing electric light and power in the city of Boston, had erected a standard about twenty-five feet
The plaintiff, at the time of the accident, was at work with others for the Telegraph and Telephone Company in stringing a telephone wire from the top of a building in West Street to the standard on No. 45 Temple Place, and thence to a fixture on the top of a building on the other side of Temple Place. He was told by the foreman to go upon the building No. 45 Temple Place and attach this wire to the standard there. He went up through the building No. 29 Temple Place, called the Warren building, and out upon the roof of that building, thence across the intervening roofs to the roof of No. 41. There were no steps or other means provided for getting from the roof of No. 41 to the roof of No. 45, and there was no ladder or rope on the roof which could be used for this purpose. There was access to the roof of No. 41 through the building No. 41, and also access to the roof of No. 45 through the building No. 45. The plaintiff, after getting upon the roof of No. 41, and after calling to a fellow workman in the street to come up on the roof of No. 45, went to look over the side of the roof of No. 41 to see how he could get down upon the roof of No. 45. He was looking over the side of the roof on to the roof of No. 45, and was stooping down — he had to stoop down to clear a large bunch of the wires — when he felt a current of electricity go through him, and he remembered nothing more. The plaintiff was found lying under the first group of wires, with four of his fingers burnt and a wound upon the side of his head where the hair was burnt off. The nearer of the two alternating electric light wires, as one approached them in going toward the side of the roof, had upon it
It appeared that the alternating electric light wires did not resemble any wires used by other companies, except the police signal wires. The plaintiff testified in substance that he noticed the big bunch of wires, by which he must have meant the first group, but that he did not recollect noticing the others. All he remembered was that there was a big body of wires, and that he had to stoop in order to clear them, but he cleared them, and went to the edge of the roof and looked down ; that he could not say whether there were any wires on his left or not; that he noticed that there were different kinds of wires on the roof after he got on to it; that the only safe rule to follow was to treat every wire as dangerous ; that he was very careful not to touch any wire on a roof, because he was liable to get a shock; that even telegraph or telephone wires sometimes got across wires having
The accident happened in the morning of March 10, 1890, when it was broad daylight. The jury found, in answer to a question submitted to them, that the plaintiff at the time of the injury was upon the roof of No. 41 Temple Place by the implied permission or license of a person having authority to grant such permission or license. The presiding justice ruled that the plaintiff could not under his declaration “ claim that the defendant was unlawfully or without right maintaining the alternating wires in the position in which they were at the time of the accident, reserving, however, to the plaintiff the right to claim that the defendant negligently maintained said wires in such position.” He also ruled “ that there was no evidence of any invitation, express or implied,” held out to the plaintiff by the owners of the building No. 41, and no evidence of any preparation or adaptation of the building by the owners for the plaintiff’s use; and that, “ if the plaintiff was a mere licensee, the defendant, if liable at all, was not liable for mere omission on its part to exercise reasonable care as to the position or condition of the wire which caused the plaintiff’s injury, but would be liable only for acts of commission, and refused to rule that there was no evidence of any such act of commission.” He also ruled “ that a mere licensee going upon another man’s land must take the premises as he finds them, subject to all their concomitant conditions and perils ; and that, if the plaintiff was a mere licensee, in order to recover he must show some change or alteration in the condition of the premises or wire thereon whereby injury may arise to persons being upon the roof in question, that such change or alteration occurred during the existence of
Under this statement of the law, the claim of the plaintiff was in effect that the alternating electric light wires were not properly insulated; that at the particular place where the plaintiff touched one of them the insulation had been carelessly allowed to be worn off; and that the wires were placed in a position so near to the roof that a person on the roof would naturally come in contact with them. The jury must have found that, there was a license or permission given by the defendant to the Telegraph and Telephone Company to attach its wires to its standard on the building No. 45 Temple Place. The principal questions argued are, whether the defendant owed the Telegraph and Telephone Company and its servants any duty in regard to the proper insulation or position of its wires at the place where the wires ran over the roof of the building No. 41, and if it did, whether the plaintiff in going to the side of the roof as he did to look down upon the roof of No. 45 for the purpose of find
The first prayer of the defendant for instructions raises the question whether, upon all the evidence, the plaintiff can recover. We doubt if the plaintiff offered sufficient evidence that he was in the exercise of due care at the time and place of the accident. It was daylight, the wires were visible, and the plaintiff knew that some of the wires might be dangerous. If we assume that as against the owner of the building No. 41 he was rightfully on the roof of that building for the purpose of going down upon the roof of the building No. 45, there was on the side of the roof a long distance unobstructed over which he could have looked down with safety. The plaintiff could look down upon the roof ' of No. 45 in his own way, and the safe place to do this was obvious. Instead of selecting a safe place, he unnecessarily stooped under some wires which he saw and knew might be dangerous, without noticing another set of wires lower down which were in plain sight. In consequence of this conduct, his hand accidentally came in contact with one of the alternating electric light wires at a point where the insulation was worn off, and he received his injury. If necessary to the decision, it would certainly deserve consideration whether this conduct does not show an unnecessary exposure to a danger which the plaintiff knew, or ought to have known. ' See Lothrop v. Fitchburg Railroad, 150 Mass. 423. Without determining this question, however, we are of opinion that the defendant, on the evidence, owed no duty to the plaintiff to have its wires properly insulated at the place where he received his injury, or to have its wires at that place supported so far above the roof of the building No. 41 that the plaintiff would not come in contact with them when on that roof. On the evidence recited in the exceptions, the most favorable inference for the plaintiff is that the Telegraph and Telephone Company was permitted by the defendant to use its standard on the building No. 45 Temple Place, and that therefore the plaintiff, as the servant of the Telegraph and Telephone Company, engaged in its business, had an implied license from the defendant to go upon the roof of this building and attach telegraph and telephone wires to its standard. Whatever may be the duty of the defendant toward. its licensees, it must be
In the view we have taken of this case, the questions arising on the demurrer need not be determined.
Exceptions sustained.