This action was brought by plaintiff, as administratrix, respondent herein, of the deceased, to recover from defendant and appellant damages for the death of the said deceased while in the employ of a telephone company on May 22, 1908. The deceased was working at the upper cable, suspended between poles of the telephone company some eight or ten feet above defendant’s wires. All wires were many feеt above the ground. His helper had pulled a platform up to him in accordance with custom, and then at the request of the deceased took a piece of wire from a coil on the ground, which was coiled up there for that purpose, and by means of a rope drew it up to deceased. The.piece of wire sent up was too short for its intended purpose. Deceased asked him to send up another and longer piece. The assistant procured such a piece, coiled it up, tied it to the rope, and was pulling it up to deceased, when the wire became uncoiled. One end of it came in contact with the wires of defendant and appellant, heavily charged with electricity. As it came up to the platform, deceased reached over and, instead of grasping the rope to which the wire was attached, took hold of the wire itself with his left hand. The current was grоunded through the deceased, who had put his right hand on some other substance, passed through him, precipitated him to the ground, and ca.used his death. The negligence with which the defendant was charged was “that the defendant strung and maintained two wires through which was transmitted a heavy electrical current upon poles of the telephone company, and that the wires so strung and maintained by the defendant were negligently and improperly insulated; that the electrical current passing through them was dangerous and fatal to human life, and a menace to the public and any one who
Defendant urges, however, that deсeased was either a licensee or a trespasser. It insists: “The poles, upon which were strung the wires of the Zenith Telephone Company and the wires of the defendant, Duluth Edison Electric Company, were used and occupied by both companies by a common understanding between them. The electric company had the right to use the poles of the telephone company, and the telephone company had the right to use the poles of the electric company, for stringing and operating their wires for the respective purposes of the different companies.” Accordingly, the deceased, while acting within the scope of his employment, was a licensee; but “if he meddled with the wires of the defendant electric company or used them for purposes other than that for which they were intended, then he was a trespasser in his relation to the defendant company, and in either case of licensee or trespasser the same degree of care is not charged upon the defendant company as would be in case of a person upon a public highway, or one who uses electricity furnished by it as a commodity, ■ under the rule announced by this court in Gilbert v. Duluth General Electric Co.,
Defendant’s duty under the circumstances was clear. The use of electricity, a “silent, deadly, and instantaneous force,” is governed by the law of negligence, not by the principles of insurance of sаfety. See New Omaha v. Anderson,
In none of the authorities to which defendant directs our attention was. the person injured upon the premises of. his master as was this deceased. In Hector v. Boston,
In the case at bar. the- deceased was working on his master’s premises, in the course of his natural and usual employment, at a place where defendant knew he might naturally be required to go. Defendant had failed to inspect its insulation for six years. The most casual view, according to the testimony favorable to plaintiff, would have shown its imperfect condition. Defendant owed deceased a duty.’ Its violation of that duty the jury was justified in finding.
' The English authorities are clear that, if there be a satisfaction and an extinguishment of a cаuse of action ex contractu or ex delicto by an absolute or unconditional release executed to one of a number of persons jointly liable, the cause of action is released as to all; however, where it is agreed that one of the parties is not to be sued, the instrument is not a release. Such words are quite as applicable to a covenant not to sue as to a release. See Bateson v. Gosling, L. R. 7 C. P. 9, per Willes, J., аt page 14, and per Keating and Brett, J J., at page 16. The question is one of intention. If the instrument is to operate as a release, the right against a party jointly liable cannot be reserved. Price v. Barker, 4 El. & Bl. 760, 777, per Coleridge, J. These two cases involved actions ex contractu. The test they announced for determining the difference between a covenant not to sue and a release was approved and applied in an action ex dеlicto in Duck v. Mayeu [1892] 2 Q. B. 511.
The American authorities, defendant frankly admits, have recognized the substance of the rule. In one of the later cases, Chicago v. Averill,
The principal controversy here concerns, not the rule itself, but the means by which a covenant not to sue is to be distinguished from а release. The reservation of the right to sue other joint tort feasors
The inclination of the American cases is to lay less stress than the English decisions upon the new agreement not to sue and to hold that it is neither an exclusive nor a conclusive test. Many instruments concerning such a reservation have been held to be releases. There is not, however, the inconsistency between thе authorities on the point which is sometimes attributed to them. Undoubtedly, general statements have tended to create doubt and confusion; but when they are limited to the particular instrument in issue most apparent discrepancies disappear. It is entirely consistent with giving effect to the reservation of a right to sue other joint tort feasors to hold that a clause in an agreement that other persons jointly liable shall not be discharged by. the agreement not to sue a particular joint tort feasor does not prevent the instrument, construed as a whole, from being a release. If a given instrument, so construed, is in law a release, it is not material that the parties agreed that it shall.not be a release. The repugnant clause is void, just as in the case of an agreement which really creates a partnership1 a clause that the parties shall not be partners is ineffectual. The law construes such instruments, detеrmines their effect, and enforces the sequences which follow from the real intent.
Thus in McBride v. Scott,
It is not, however, necessary here to consider nor to determine the exact test by which a release is to be distinguished from a covenant not to sue. It is well settled that the distinction exists; that the intention of the parties controls; that if they have in fact, by use of
In the case at bar the writing, after reciting the facts from which the injury arose and the payment оf a consideration of $1,000, set forth that plaintiff covenanted with the telephone company that she would never prosecute any action against the telephone company for damages arising from the death of deceased, that the payment of the consideration should in no wise debar or affect any action against other persons or corporations arising out of the death, and that the consideration was paid solеly for said covenant not to sue the telephone company for such damages. It also contained a clause to the effect that in case, in an action against the present defendant, the courts should hold that no cause of action existed against such defendant for such damages, the plaintiff might remit the said $1,000 to the telephone company, and thereafter commence an action against the telephone compаny at any time within the statute of limitations. The clearly expressed intent was to create, not a release, but a covenant not to sue. The instrument contained no inconsistencies in language. It was not absolute, but conditional, in its terms. It did not purport to be a satisfaction of the telephone company’s liability. It did not finally extinguish the right to sue against any of the tort feasors. To hold that it operated as a satisfaction of the cause of action arising frоm the negligence which it recited as the cause of death of deceased would be a gross perversion of its terms and a misapplication of the principles we have just considered.
“No release is allowed by implication; it must be the immediate result of the terms of the instrument, which contains the stipulation, hence it is that a covenant not to sue one joint debtor or trespasser, though it operates between the immediate parties, does not extend to the others.” Such a covenant is an agreement for the benefit of the parties named, and for them only. Other joint tort feasors, not parties therеto, are entitled to no contract benefit thereunder. In a multitude of cases, this general rule as to covenant not to sue has been applied, and full recovery had against other persons jointly liable. There can, of course, be but one satisfaction of a cause of action. An unqualified release imports full satisfaction. Therefore it avails to bar subsequent recovery of damages for a cause of action which has been disсharged; that is, the release of one is the release of all. A release which is expressly in part satisfaction only, by parity of reasoning, has been held to reduce the amount subsequently recoverable. Defendant refers us to authorities which have so held. Thus in Ellis v. Esson,
As to the absence of merit in the reservation appearing in that case, see McBride v. Scott,
In the case at bar the statute limited the amount of recovery to $5,000. The agreement, as has been pointed out, was not a release at all, but an optional covenant not to sue. The agreement was not in the nature of a receipt, of an accord and satisfaction, or of a settlement of a claim, in whole or in part. It excluded the idea оf satisfaction, either partial or entire. It was expressly conditional. In a named contingency plaintiff was entitled to return the consideration paid and to sue the telephone’ company. , In this view it is unnecessary to consider the further questions whether the telephone company and the telegraph company, in view of the absence of any concert of action, were joint tort feasors in the technical sense (comparе Chapman v. Pittsburg Rys. Co. [C. C.]
A number of alleged trial errors have been assigned. Most of the objections to rulings on evidence were addressed to exclusion by the trial court of testimony as to the experience of the deceased. In part, at least, the objections were withdrawn. In part they were addressed to conclusions purely and were properly excluded. The testimony fully showed the facts from which the inference of the ex-
Affirmed.
