258 Pa. 400 | Pa. | 1917
Opinion by
Plaintiff sued to recover damages for the death of her husband caused by his . coming in contact with a defectively insulated wire belonging to defendant company, while he was engaged in inspecting a cable of the Bell Telephone Company, his employer. The trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff and judgment thereon, from which defendant appealed.
The Bell Telephone Company and the Sayre Electric Company, the defendant, by mutual agreement, together used a line of poles for carrying their respective wires, the upper ten feet of the poles being allotted to the telephone company, and the lower part to the electric company, each maintaining its wires entirely independent of the line of the other. Defendant had on its line a number of wires for conveying electric current for lighting and power purposes, one of which carried at least approximately 2,300 volts. The Bell Company, on the part of the poles apportioned to its use, placed cross-arms in the usual manner, and below these strung a lead cable, containing a large number of wires, which was supported by a steel messenger wire hung at a distance of 4 feet 4 inches above the wires of defendant company, except at the pole near which the accident happened, being the one
Deceased, an expert cable repairman, upon notice to the telephone company of trouble in its line, Avas sent to Sayre to examine the lead cable and repair defects. Upon arrival in that town a preliminary examination was made of the line from the ground to ascertain its connections and terminus, this being the first time deceased had worked in that locality, and the following morning, June 27, 1913, the work of inspection was commenced. This work required deceased to travel along the wire on a device, equipped with a suspended seat and known as a buggy, which moved from pole to pole, using the messenger wire as a track. To properly examine and inspect wires the operator is obliged to lean sidewise until his head and body are level with the cable, and while in this position support himself by throwing one arm over the messenger wire. Deceased with his helper worked during the day along the line until six o’clock in the evening, when he reached the point where the distance between the wires of the two companies decreased to 2 feet 4 inches, and his foot came in contact with defendant’s high voltage wire at a place where the insulation was defective, his body immediately completing the circuit between the two wires, and causing his death.
v The main question raised by this appeal is the effect of a release given by plaintiff to the Bell Telephone Company. That company maintains on behalf of its employees a fund described under what is termed “a plan for the payment of pensions and accident and sickness disability benefits to employees and of life insurance to their beneficiaries at time of death,” the object being to provide “.for the payment of definite amounts to its employees when they are disabled by accident or sickness or when they are retired from service, or, in the event of death, to their dependent relatives.” In the life insurance branch of this plan, under which the payment and
Pursuant to a provision in the insurance fund plan, a certain amount was advanced plaintiff to pay funeral expenses, and the balance paid upon execution of the release, making a total payment of $2,808, exactly three years’ wages of plaintiff’s husband at $18 a week. There was no sum- included in the release intended as a payment on account of other claims plaintiff might have by reason of alleged negligence of the telephone company. On the contrary, under the express provision of the insurance fund plan, the very fact of making claim “other
The contention of defendant is that the negligence of the telephone company concurred with that of defendant, that the cause of action was a joint tort, and the release of one was a bar to further proceeding against the other. The rule is that a release of one joint tort-feasor releases all. This is based on the theory that the injured person has but a single claim and one cause of action, and while he may sue separately as many persons as were connected with the accident, he can obtain but one satisfaction of the claim; consequently, if the release offered in evidence was accepted by plaintiff in satisfaction of her claim for injuries sustained by the death of her husband through the joint negligence of defendant and the telephone company, her action is jarred.
In determining this contention, the primary matter to be considered is whether there was joint negligence of the party released: Conway v. Pottsville Union Traction Co., 253 Pa. 211. Before reaching this point in the present case, we are met with the question whether or not, in fact, this proceeding is based on the sanie cause of action which was the subject-matter of the release. If not, the question whether there was joint negligence between the two companies need not be considered. As stated above, the claim of plaintiff against the telephone company was not a claim for negligence causing the death of her husband; Under the insurance plan plaintiff had the right to elect whether she would bring such action against the telephone company or accept the benefits of the insurance fund. She elected to adopt the latter course. The release, as executed, is broad in its scope and includes a release of claims of any nature that might exist because of the death of her husband, hence there is no doubt of its being an effectual bar to a subsequent action against the telephone company for alleged negligence on its part. Such provision, however, does not necessarily convert the acquittance into a compro
Defendant also questions the sufficiency of the evidence of negligence, and argues the carelessness was wholly on the part of the telephone company in constructing its messenger wire in such close proximity to the high voltage wire of defendant as to permit a workman to come in contact with the latter, and by reason of such disregard of proper care the telephone company’s action was the proximate cause of the accident. Whether that company’s negligence was the proximate cause of the injury was fairly submitted to the jury and found against the defendant. We find no evidence of an agreement or understanding between the two companies requiring the cable or wires of the telephone company to be maintained a fixed distance above the wires of the electric company, other than what may be inferred from the fact they were so constructed, except at the place where the accident happened. If such construction be evidence of an agreement, then we have the same evidence that the position of the wire at the point where the accident happened, which was 2 feet 4 inches above defendant’s wires, was also located by agreement. This wire was put in place in 1908, and remained in the same position until the time of the accident in 1913, and, so far as the evidence goes, we find nothing tending to- show • the telephone company was not entitled to use any part of the ten feet of space allotted to it. The trial judge instructed the jury defendant was obliged, in view of the conditions existing in plain view for so long a time, to see that its wires were in such reasonably safe condition as to afford protection from injury of persons coming in contact with them in the course of their employment. This instruction is in accordance with a number of recent cases, and is substantially the language used in Fitzgerald v. Edison Electric Illuminating Co., 200 Pa.
Deceased’s contributory negligence was also for the jury.. Although the break in the insulation of defendant’s wire was visible from the ground, and deceased passed the place of the accident in the course of his inspection of the telephone wires from the ground the preceding day, the object of his inspection was not to ascertain the condition of the defendant’s wires, but those of ^ his company. We cannot say, as a matter of law, that deceased must necessarily have noticed the defective insulation of defendant’s wire in the course of his examination of the wires of his company. There is also evidence that deceased, from his position on the buggy, might readily have seen a break in the insulation of the wire immediately below him had he taken the precaution to look, and it cannot be questioned seriously that, as an experienced lineman, he was aware of the danger which would result from contact with a naked high voltage
The judgment is affirmed.