195 Ky. 582 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1922
-Affirming on cross appeal and reversing on original appeal.
Joe Morris, a lineman in the employ of the Kentucky Public Service Company, was killed by electricity, and his administrator brought suit to recover damages for his death. In the first trial plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment for $10,000.00. A new trial was granted and the second trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for $7,500.00. Defendant appeals and plaintiff, by cross appeal, asks a reinstatement of the first verdict and judgment.
The facts are as follows: The Kentucky Public Service Company operates an electric light plant in Hopkins-ville, and its primary wires carry a voltage of 2,200, sufficient to produce death. The accident occurred on the afternoon of September 20,1917. At that time Morris had been working for the company only about three weeks, but had previously worked for them in the year 1915. Morris and Cunningham had been engaged in the work of transferring wires from an old pole to a new pole, and were on the new pole at the time. On the pole were two double sets of cross arms, one at the top and the other about twelve feet below. The cross arms were about five feet long. Attached to glass insulators on the top cross arm were two primary wires which were extended perpendicularly to the insulators on the lower cross arm. When this was done, the wire stuck out twelve or eighteen inches. On the pole were two cut-outs, or fuse boxes, and a transformer. The purpose of the transformer was to reduce the force of the current to 110 volts in order that it might he employed for incandescent lights in homes and business houses. The top of the transformer was on a level with -the lower cross arm, and the frise box was attached about midway between the transformer and the insulator near the end of the cross arm. Morris was seated on the transformer with his left side to the pole. One wire was in his rear and the other in front. His task was to take hold of the projecting wire in front and attach it to the cut-out. He had on leather or buckskin gloves, and in his right hand he held a pair of pliers, the insulation of which was defective. When he applied the pliers, he nicked the wire and was heard to groan. Cunningham, who was nearby and who also had on a pair of leather or buckskin gloves, cut the wire with his pliers and released him. He was killed by the shock. There was evidence
In addition to instructions authorizing a recovery if decedent’s death was caused by the defendant’s failure to use the highest degree of care to so insulate its wires as to make them free from danger, or by its failure to use ordinary care to furnish decedent a safe place to work, the court gave a general instruction on contributory negligence. There is no complaint of the given instructions, but it is insisted that the court erred in refusing a concrete instruction telling the jury in substance that if Morris knew of the danger, and, without the use of the rubber gloves Avhich had been furnished him, took hold of the Avire and Avas thereby injured and. killed, he assumed the risk and could not recover. Plaintiff argues that the offered instruction should not have been given as the issue therein presented Avas fully covered by the instruction on contributory negligence. "While we have
If it could be said as a matter of law that the transmission of the current through decedent’s hand was the proximate cause of his death, then defendant would have been entitled to a peremptory instruction; but, in view of the evidence that decedent, in addition to the burnt place in his hand, had a burnt place on his leg and a place that looked like a burn on his shoulder, and of the further evidence that Cunningham, when he cut the wire with his pliers, had on leather gloves and was not injured, we think the question of proximate causé was for
You will find for plaintiff unless you believe from the evidence that the transmission of the current through decedent’s hand was the proximate cause of his death.
On the cross appeal the judgment is affirmed. On the original appeal the judgment is reversed and cause remanded for a new trial consistent with this opinion.