214 N.W. 658 | Minn. | 1927
For a statement of most of the material facts see Howard v. City of Stillwater, supra, page 391. The pole referred to in the companion case carried a span wire running across the street to support a trolley wire used in the operation of respondent's street car line. The fire alarm wire was attached to the pole in question without respondent's express consent. The evidence shows that similar attachments of the wire to respondent's poles had been made in several other places in the city, some of them at least six years before the accident. While respondent never gave the city permission to use its poles, it did not object; and it is a fair inference that it must have known of the use which the city was making of them.
The theory upon which appellant seeks to charge respondent with liability may be thus stated: The proximate cause of the injury was the defective pole. The defect was hidden. To its own employes respondent owed a duty to use ordinary care to maintain the pole so that it would be safe to go upon it in case a wire attached thereto had to be repaired. This duty carried with it an obligation to inspect and test the pole for defects. The duty extended to any person employed or authorized by the city to repair its wires attached to the pole, since the effect of respondent's conduct was to give consent to the city's use of the pole.
On the other hand, respondent contends that not only did it not invite appellant to go upon the pole for any purpose, but that he was at most a licensee to whom respondent owed no duty whatever.
We think it cannot be gainsaid that the mere fact that the city was permitted to attach its fire alarm wire to the pole did not impose liability on respondent for the maintenance of the pole in a safe condition for the use of the city's employes. It may be that the permission amounted to a license to them to go upon the pole to repair the fire alarm wire. But if this be granted, appellant is no better off, for it is well settled that as to mere licensees the owner of a building or other structure owes no duty except to avoid exposing *397
them wilfully to the risk of injury. Mazey v. Loveland,
The respondent did not invite appellant to repair the wire. Its interests were not furthered by anything the appellant did or attempted to do. It was appellant's act which caused the wire to break. He volunteered to repair it. At most his conversation with the chief of the fire department gave him permission to repair it. He was not authorized to climb the pole. Indeed it was not necessary to do so to put the ends of the wire together and raise it above the ground and out of the way of passersby.
Appellant cites such cases as McDonald v. Cuyuna R.P. Co.
Reliance is placed on Moersdorf v. New York Tel. Co.
Neither is Hoppe v. City of Winona,
This is a case more nearly like Collar v. Bingham Lake R. Tel. Co.
See also Heskell v. Auburn L.H. P. Co.
Order affirmed. *399