76 Ind. App. 445 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1921
This is an action by appellee against appellant for damages arising out of the death of appellee’s decedent, which occurred while he was working for appellant as a lineman, stringing wires in his railroad yards in the city of Indianapolis, by reason of an electric shock received from a high-voltage wire with which he came in contact. The complaint is in a single
The only reasons presented by appellant in support of its contention, that the court erred in overruling his motion for a new trial, are based on the action of the court in giving instructions Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 7, and on a claim that the damages assessed by the jury are excessive. There was no error-in giving said instruction No. 1, as the error of which complaint
Appellant’s objection to instruction No. 2 is based on a claim, that it informed the jury that electricity is a dangerous element, and because of that fact it was his duty to exercise more than ordinary care for the safety of appellee’s decedent. That electricity is a dangerous element is a fact so firmly established and well known that to so assume and state in an instruction, where dangers arising from its use are involved, is not error. Such fact, however, does not require that a master use more than ordinary care for the protection of his servants from dangers arising therefrom. Union Traction Co. v. Berry (1919), 188 Ind. 514, 121 N. E. 655, 124 N. E. 737. While ordinary care still remains the measure of a master’s duty toward his servant, notwithstanding the presence of such a dangerous element as an electric current, the quantum of such care, made necessary by reason of the presence of such dangerous element, is a fact to be considered in determining whether a master has discharged his duty toward his servant in a particular instance. Thus it has been said: “Ordinary care ebbs and flows with the danger to be fairly anticipated by a man of reasonable prudence from the circumstances and conditions involved in each case.” Louisville, etc., Traction Co. v. Walker (1912), 177 Ind. 38, 97 N. E. 151. The instruction under consideration is well within the rules stated. While it informed the jury that greater care must be exercised to avoid danger, where an electrical current is present, than would be required where such a dangerous element was absent, still in the same instruction,
Appellant contends that instruction No. 3, is erroneous, as it invaded the province of the jury: (1) By stating that the condition arising from the arrangement of the wires on the pole, was a dangerous one, and (2) by stating that appellee was entitled to recover, if the decedent met his death by reason .of such dangerous condition. An examination of said instruction discloses, that it does not assume that the arrangement of the wires on the pole created a dangerous condition, as appellee’s right of recovery is expressly conditioned on the fact, that the jury should so find. Any error arising from an assumption that such dangerous condition, if found, was the result of appellant’s negligence, and therefore entitled appellee to a recovery, was
Appellant’s objection to instruction No. 7 is based on the fact, that it is stated therein, that in the event the jury found for appellee, it would have a right to consider the probable expectancy of life of appellee and his wife, as bearing upon the question as to how long they might reasonably have expected financial assistance from the decedent, without limiting such consideration to the facts disclosed by the evidence. That the jury should have been misled by any such omission, is a very remote possibility. However, we observe that the court, in the preceding part of said instruction, called the jury’s attention to the evidence admitted with reference to- the expectancies of life of appellee, his wife and the decedent, and stated that its purpose was to aid the jury in determining the amount of appellee’s recovery, if they found in his favor. This fact, supplemented by the statement in a preceding instruction given the jury, that “it is your duty to find the facts as shown by the evidence,” clearly shows that there was no reversible error in giving said instruction, as appellant was not harmed by a failure to limit the same as he contends.