174 Mass. 212 | Mass. | 1899
After the former decision in this case, reported in 161 Mass. 558, the plaintiff amended his declaration by adding an allegation that the defendant was wrongfully maintaining its wires over 41 Temple Place, without any right or permission from the owners or occupants thereof, and went to trial on the declaration as thus amended. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence the learned Chief Justice of the Superior Court ruled that the plaintiff could not recover and directed a verdict for the defendant. The case comes here now on the plaintiff’s exceptions to this ruling and order. The plaintiff contends that the evidence at the last trial differed favorably to him in material respects from what it was at the former trial, and therefore that the grounds on which the court decided that case are not applicable to this. But while it is true that there are some differences, we do not think that they affect the substantial grounds on which the decision in that case was placed. Those grounds were, in brief, that the defendant owed no duty to the plaintiff to have its wires properly insulated at the place where he was injured, or to have them supported so far above the roof of No. 41 that the plaintiff would not come in contact with them, and that the defendant was not required, for the protection of the servants of the telephone company, to maintain an effectual insulation of its wires over other buildings than that on which the standard was placed at places where the defendant had no reason to expect that they would go in using its standard, and where the defendant had neither invited nor licensed them to go.
It was assumed in the opinion that the defendant had permitted the telephone company to use its standard on building No. 45 Temple Place, and that the plaintiff, as the servant of that company, had an implied license through the defendant from the owner or occupant to go upon the roof of No. 45 and attach telegraph and telephone wires to the standard. The fact, if it was a fact, that the right of the telephone company to attach its wires to the standard was somewhat greater than it was there assumed to be, does not affect the principle on which that case was decided. That case turned not on the nature of the right which
The matters most strongly urged as new or as not developed at the former trial consist of evidence, tending to show that there had been a joint use to a greater or less extent prior to the accident by the defendant and the telephone company of structures throughout the city, the structures sometimes belonging to one and sometimes to the other; that the telephone company had so used the standard belonging to the defendant on the building No. 45 Temple Place ; that linemen in the discharge of their duties go everywhere upon roofs where there are wires, and from roof to roof as may be necessary to reach a particular fixture, though whether with or without the permission of the owners or occupants of the buildings did not appear, and that the alternating wires which were strung from the fixture on the building No. 45 Temple Place to that on No. 34 Temple Place, and from one of which the plaintiff received the shock which caused the injury, had been strung only a short time before the
We have not considered the. question of due care on the part of the plaintiff. We doubt whether a finding that he was in the exercise of due care would be warranted. ' The view which we have taken of the effect of the former decision renders it unnecessary, however, to consider that question.
Exceptions overruled.