171 Mo. App. 29 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
This is a suit for damages alleged to have accrued to plaintiff through the negligence of defendant, which, it is said, occasioned the wrongful death of his minor son. The finding and judgment were for defendant, and plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.
Plaintiff is the father of Boy Jeffrey, a youth aged seventeen years, one month and nineteen days, at the date of his death. Plaintiff’s son was in the employ of the Bell Telephone Company, and had been for six months, as a wire splicer and inspector, and came to his death while engaged in the line of duty through receiving an electric shock communicated from defendant, Union Electric Light & Power Company’s wires by means of a Bell Telephone wire which he held in his hand. The young man had been directed by his foreman to accompany another workman, Burns, to the alley connecting Taylor with Euclid avenues and running east and west between Berlin and Maryland avenues in St. Louis for the purpose of testing the wires of the Bell Telephone Company. The wires of the Bell Telephone Company, in whose employ plaintiff’s son was at the time, and those of defendant, Union Electric Light & Power Company, both occupied the same poles on the north side of the alley. There were several cross arms on the poles and it appears that the wires of defendant Union Electric Light & Power Company were made fast to the lower ■cross arms, while those of the Bell Telephone Company were made fast to the upper cross arms, about three feet above.
A severe rain and windstorm occurred about one o’clock during the day and as a result of this the limb ■of a tree was cast against a Bell Telephone wire with sufficient force to break if. Upon the breaking of the wire, one end fall to the ground near the center of the alley, while a portion of the wire above rested upon the cable of defendant Union Electric Light & Power
The evidence abundantly reveal’s a case of negligence on the part of defendant and the court properly submitted that question to the jury. Indeed, there are no criticisms leveled against the instructions of the court pertaining to the matter of defendant’s negligence. The burden of the argument advanced here for a reversal of the' judgment is directed against the instruction which submitted the question of plaintiff’s contributory, negligence to the jury. In view of decedent’s experience, though but a youth, and of his knowledge of the dang’er which inhered in like situations, the evidence tends with great force to suggest that he was careless of his own safety in taking hold of the end of the telephone wire as it rested in the alley and lay across the defendant’s defective high tension cable above his head. On this question the court instructed the jury that if it believe from the evidence that the act of plaintiff’s deceased minor son in taking hold of the fallen telephone wire, if the jury should find from the evidence that he did take hold of and try to remove it, was an act which a reasonably prudent person of his age, experience and knowledge would not have done at the time and under the circumstances and surroundings,shown by the evidence and that such act directly contributed to his death, then the verdict should be for defendant. Obviously this instruction was proper in the circumstances of the case, and it is difficult to perceive the full meaning of the argument directed against it.
However, we believe the argument touching the court’s instructions on the question of the contribu
“The jury is instructed that it was the duty of plaintiff’s deceased son to himself to exercise reasonable care for his own safety, and if yon believe under the evidence in this ease that he took hold of and attempted to remove the fallen telephone wire, and that in doing so he omitted to take such precautions as a reasonably prudent boy of his age and experience should have taken, and if the jury believe from the evidence that he knew, or if in the exercise of ordinary care in his vocation he would have known of his liability to injury from defendant’s wire, and that the wearing of rubber gloves or rubber boots would have lessened his peril, and if the jury believe from the evidence that the wearing of either rubber gloves or rubber boots would have been a reasonable and proper precaution for him to take for his own safety under the circumstances and in his situation, and that knowing the peril of attempting to remove said wire without either rubber gloves or rubber boots, he took hold of same without such precaution and thereby directly contributed to Ms injury, then the jury will find for the defendant.”
It is urged that the court should not tell the jury, as a matter of law, that the mere omission to wear rubber gloves or rubber boots would preclude a right of recovery. The proposition thus advanced may be accepted as entirely sound, for the court did not so instruct. To have thus declared the law would, no doubt, have infringed plaintiff’s rights, for such an instruction would amount to a peremptory direction of a verdict for defendant. However, the instruction above copied is not open to this criticism, for by it the jury
"We have examined the other matters urged in the brief for a reversal but do not consider them of suffi