40 A.2d 43 | Md. | 1944
These suits were brought by Andrew William Le Vonas and Frederick James Fado, employees of an independent contractor, to recover for injuries alleged to have been caused by negligence of Acme Paper Board Company and Consolidated Gas, Electric Light Power Company.
The cases were tried together before a jury in the Baltimore City Court, where plaintiffs testified that the paper board company had engaged Paul Pugh to hoist a number of steel beams from the edge of its field along the side of Big Falls Road at White Hall, Maryland, to the roof of its building, and that Pugh had employed them to do the work. On the morning of September 24, 1940, they began the work of moving the beams by means of a crane, with a boom 70 feet long, operated by a workman under their direction. They had loaded a *19 number of beams on a truck, ready to be hauled to the building, and had just placed a 10-foot beam in the hooks of the steel cable hanging from the boom, with intention of putting that beam also on the truck, when Le Vonas told Fado to hold the beam from moving until he found where it belonged. Le Vonas then stooped over a blueprint for about five minutes to find out the number of the beam which would locate its proper position in the roof. While the cable was hanging motionless within four feet of the main line of electric wires maintained by the Consolidated Gas, Electric Light Power Company along the side of the road, Fado suddenly saw a blue flame jumping along the beam, and instantaneously he was knocked to the ground and burned by electricity. As he fell, the beam started to move. Le Vonas, seeing the beam drifting toward him, raised his hand to hold it, whereupon he too was shocked. At the close of their evidence, plaintiffs admitted the electric company was not liable. These appeals are from judgments entered upon directed verdicts in favor of the paper board company.
Plaintiffs contend that defendant was negligent because it did not warn them that the wires were dangerous. In 1869 Judge Alvey announced the general rule in Deford v. State, to Use ofKeyser,
If the owner employs an independent contractor to do certain work, he owes to employees of the contractor the same duty he would owe to employees of his own to furnish them a safe place to work. When the risk to which an employee is exposed arises from causes which are concealed, the employer is bound to notify him of them, provided that he himself knows them, or by the exercise of ordinary care ought to have known of them. But while the owner must exercise reasonable care to have his own plant safe for employees of his contractor, he does not stand in the shoes of the contractor, for manifestly, if he is concerned only in the general results of the work and has no control of the details and manner in which the work is to be accomplished, he should not be liable for injuries caused to employees of the contractor during the progress of the work. On the contrary, if the injury is such as might have been anticipated as a probable consequence of the work, and the employer took no precaution to prevent it, he can be held liable for negligence. In other words, liability for injuries to a servant of an independent contractor rests upon the owner when the premises on which the stipulated work is done remain under his control and the injuries arise out of the abnormally dangerous condition of the premises, the owner being chargeable with knowledge of the danger. Smith v. Benick,
In accordance with these basic principles, the law does not require that a person, who maintains even so deadly an instrumentality as a high voltage electric wire, shall anticipate at his peril every possible fortuitous circumstance under which some person might make a contact with the wire, resulting in injury or death. Hayden v. Paramount Productions,
The law does not require an electric company to insulate its high-tension wires everywhere, but only where there is reason to apprehend that persons may come in contact with them, either in the pursuit of their calling or where they may be reasonably expected to go. In the absence of statute or ordinance, it is not necessary to insulate wires which are so placed that no one could reasonably be expected to come in close proximity to them. Brownv. Edison Electric Illuminating Co., *22
In the case at bar plaintiffs testified that they saw the electric wires, and could not tell whether they were insulated, and made no inquiry, but assumed that they were low voltage wires like "ordinary house wires." Without any protective devices, they recklessly brought the steel cable almost directly under the wires. The American Law Institute comments that in the present era of specialization, *23
it may be proper for a lay employer to trust implicitly in the technical competence of an independent contractor who makes a business of making or repairing many of the instrumentalities which have become a part of everyday life. 2 Restatement,Torts, Sec. 412. Plaintiffs in this case had the advantage of long experience in structural steel work. Le Vonas had been engaged in this kind of work for 15 years. Fado for 23 years. Whether or not they had been warned that the wires were high voltage, they could easily see that there were two groups of wires, the upper containing three wires, the lower four, with large insulators near the poles. Plaintiffs ought to have known that the wires carried high voltage and that contact with them would be dangerous. In addition, defendant did not possess any superior knowledge of the dangerous instrumentality and the danger therefrom to any person coming upon the property. When a person undertakes work which exposes him to obvious dangers which he knew or had the opportunity to know, he must be considered as having assumed such risks, and he cannot recover for any injuries resulting therefrom. In State, for Use of Bahner v. ConsolidatedGas, Electric Light Power Co.,
Since there was no duty on the part of defendant to warn the independent contractor or his employees that the electric wires were dangerous, we will affirm the judgments *24 entered in the court below upon the directed verdicts in favor of defendant.
Judgment in No. 35 affirmed, with costs.
Judgment in No. 36, affirmed, with costs.