433 Pa. 304 | Pa. | 1969
Opinion by
Appellee, Paul Janowicz, was a painter employed by Johnson Brothers Company, an industrial painting contractor. Johnson Brothers had contracted with Crucible Steel Company for the painting of that Company’s 2300-foot long railroad-type trestle located at Crucible’s plant in Midland, Pennsylvania.
Janowicz was required to work on scaffolding suspended in air . and supported by cables which had been strung horizontally on each side of the trestle. On June 17, 1962, one of the steel cables was severed by its contact with an electric wire which ran vertically down one of the steel leg supports of the trestle for the purpose of supplying light to a shed. Janowicz was hurled to the ground and sustained serious personal injuries. He instituted suit against Crucible and after trial, the jury returned a verdict in his favor and against Crucible.
.Crucible’s motions for judgment n.o.v. and for new trial were refused and judgment was entered on the verdict. This appeal followed.
Crucible argues that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding of negligence on its part. It reasons that the scaffolding was erected by Johnson and that its, Crucible’s, inspectors had viewed the scene prior to the accident and found that the cable in question had been tied back to prevent its coming in contact with the electric line. It contends that it had no reason to believe that, the tie-back arrangement would change and no reason to guard against such a change. Furthermore, Crucible submits, the removal of the tie
The undisputed evidence was that the cable could not have been severed by the wire if Crucible had taken any one of the basic precautions such as fusing, metal conduit, relocating the wire to the inside (instead of the outside) of the steel leg, or having the wire temporarily disconnected during the painting job. Crucible’s chief safety supervisor admitted that its installation and maintenance of the wire in question did not meet the safety requirements established by both industrial practice and by the National Electrical Code, by which Code Crucible admittedly governed its operations. The Code required the wire to be fused separately and placed in a metal conduit for protection. Instead the wire in question had a fabric insulation. Crucible’s electrical foreman admitted that the purpose of the metal conduit was to protect the wire from having its insulation worn off by rubbing and that if a metal conduit had been used on the wire in question, the accident would not have happened. Crucible’s elec
Nor did Crucible give any warning to Johnson Company at the time it was erecting the cables that the ordinary looking house wire, insulated with only a common fabric insulation, was tapped into the main line system in the manner outlined. As more fully discussed relative to the question of appellee’s contributory negligence, the presence of the electric wire itself would not indicate the danger that lay therein. There
It is our conclusion, therefore, that the trial judge properly left it to the determination of the jury whether Crucible had performed its duty to appellee by seeing that Johnson had tied back the cable away from the wire in question. The trial judge charged: “The defendant brought in witnesses, I think, from the Johnson Brothers Painters who said that they were supplied with what they call, I think, a tieback or a tie-in, which is a piece of rope to hold that wire back from touching the cable. That is another thing that the plaintiff claims here, that that was not sufficient. It is up to you, members of the jury, to determine, under the testimony, whether there was negligence, whether the plaintiff was furnished a reasonably safe place in which to work. . . . Was there due care given under these circumstances? Did the defendant do all he should have done or done what a reasonable person would have done to protect people who were there and had to work in that particular place? ... If you decide that Crucible Steel Company did everything they should have done to provide a safe place for this man to work, if you find that, you find a verdict for the defendant, if you find that they did do all they reasonably should have done and that there was no negligence on their part, as I have defined negligence to you — Tack of due care under the circumstances’ is what I said, and that is the reason I have gone into a little detail in explain
The fact that the tie-back was removed without any explanation as to when or by whom cannot be considered as an intervening cause insulating Crucible from liability since the very question before - the jury was whether the mere placing of the tie-backs was a sufficient precaution; a finding that it was not a sufficient precaution necessarily includes a finding that the removal of the tie-backs, regardless of by whom or how, was a foreseeable circumstance against which Crucible should have guarded.
As to appellee’s contributory negligence, Crucible argues that if it was bound to know that the cable and wire would come into contact with each other, appellee was bound to know the same and that he should have checked to see whether the cable supporting him was safe. Appellee,' however, was entitled to assume that Crucible had performed its affirmative duty to keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition or to. warn of dangers thereon which Crucible knew or should have known existed. The presence of the ordinary looking electric wire leading to a light bulb in the shed was not sufficient to put plaintiff on notice of the high current contained therein: Stark v. Lehigh Foundries, Inc., 388 Pa. 1, 130 A. 2d 123 (1957). As we said in that ease: “ Wires charged with an electric current may be harmless, or they may be in the highest degree dangerous. The difference in this respect is not apparent to ordinary observation, and the .public, therefore, while presumed to know that danger may be present, are not bound to know its degree in any particular case.’ ” We there concluded that though plaintiff
Our review of the record fails to reveal any error of the trial court entitling Crucible to a new trial, and the evidence being more than sufficient to sustain a finding of negligence on the part of Crucible which was the proximate cause of appellee’s injuries, the jury’s verdict must stand.
Judgment affirmed.