186 Mo. App. 602 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
— This is a suit under the wrongful death statute for damages accrued through defendant’s negligence with respect to its duty to insulate a wire employed- in transmitting electricity. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.
Plaintiff’s minor son was in the employ of the Bell Telephone Company at the time of his death, and, while in the line of duty, came in contact with a wire owned by the defendant, city of Hannibal, and employed by it in the transmission of an electric current of high voltage. Because of the insecure insulation of this wire, the electric current was transmitted to decedent and caused his death. Both the present defendant and the Bell Telephone. Company were jointly sued, but at the trial the court directed a verdict in favor of the telephone company and referred the case to the jury against the present defendant alone.
It appears plaintiff’s son was in a carrier, suspended some twenty feet above the street from a messenger wire of the Bell Telephone Company, at the intersection of Center street and an alley in the city of Hannibal, and, while so seated, was engaged at work on the wires of the Bell Telephone Company. Defendant, city of Hannibal, owned a system of wires through which it transmitted an electric current immediately adjacent to the wires on which decedent was at work, and his foot came in contact with one of defendant’s. wires. The evidence is, that the instep of
The case concedes that plaintiff’s son was in the line of duty at the time, performing the task assigned him by his employer, the Bell Telephone Company, and that he was thus exposed to contact with defendant’s wire at a place where it should have anticipated that the Bell Telephone linemen might be. On the part of plaintiff, the evidence tends to prove that his son came to his death as the result of the contact of his foot with the poorly insulated wire of defendant city. On the other hand, the evidence for defendant tends to prove that the wire was sufficiently and properly insulated, but decedent carelessly brought his. steel climbing spur, strapped on to his foot, against the insulation* broke through it by pressing against a .cross-arm, and thus received the electric shock from which he died. Besides containing a general allegation of negligence, the petition avers, too, that defendant was negligent in permitting the insulation on defendant’s wire through which the electric current was communicated to become worn and rotten.
It is urged the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for defendant because there is no evidence tending to prove the specifications of negligence so stated — that is, that the insulation on the wire was worn and rotten. But this; argument appears to be without merit, for, though the evidence is slight concerning this matter, it is sufficient. Moreover, it appears a section of the wire itself, revealing that portion of the insulation with which decedent’s foot came in contact, was before the jury and viewed by them. This considered together with the testimony of the witness, Short, is amply sufficient to constitute substantial evidence tending to prove the specific acts of negli
The principal instruction given by the court at plaintiff’s request is as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the evidence that Louis May, plaintiffs’ son, was hilled as a direct result of receiving into his person an electric shock from defendant’s, the city of Hannibal, wire or wires with which he came in contact,-then the fact that he received from: such wire or wires such electric shock is conclusive proof of the defect of the insulation on such wire or wires, unless you find and believe front the evidence that the .insulation on said wire or wires was as safe as same- could be made by all means which were reasonably accessible, and that the utmost care had been used to keep them so insulated, and that while said insulation was in such safe condition, if you find it was in such safe condition, the spur which Louis May had attached to his foot came in contact with said insulation and punctured it, through no fault of said defendant, the city of Hannibal, or through no defect in such insulation.”
It is argued this, instruction is erroneous in two respects: First, because it informs the jury that the fact decedent came to his death through receiving a shock from the wire is to be taken as conclusive proof of defective insulation, and, second, because it permits a recovery for plaintiff without heed whatever to the specific negligence charged in the petition. If the petition contained nothing more than a general averment of negligence and thus rendered the doctrine of res ipsa loquitu-r available to plaintiff, it may loe the in
In this view, it is the established rule of decision that where the petition charges specific acts of negligence, even though the case be one where under a general averment the doctrine res ipsa loquitur obtains, the instructions must require the jury to find the negligence as laid in the petition, and it is error to invoke the presumption of negligence therein, for it is said the plaintiff having asserted the facts concerning the negligence laid must be held to prove them. [Orcutt v. Century Bldg. Co., 201 Mo. 424, 99 S. W. 1062; Beave v. St. Louis Transit Co., 212 Mo. 331, 111 S. W. 52; Gibler v. Quincy, O. & K. C. R. Co., 148 Mo. App. 475, 128 S. W. 791; Miller v. United Rys. Co., 155 Mo. App. 528, 134 S. W. 1045.] The instruction above set out in nowise requires the jury to find the facts of
The judgment should, therefore, be reversed and the cause remanded. It is so ordered.