72 N.Y.S. 168 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The recent decision of the Court of Appeals in the case of McGuire v. Bell Telephone Co. (167 N. Y. 208), while predicated on a differ
In the case at bar the defendant was engaged in moving its own telegraph equipment to the opposite side of its tracks, and the plaintiff, as one of a gang of linemen engaged in the work, was sent up one of the poles to remove the wires as a preliminary step in the removal of the pole. When the wires were removed the pole fell with him and inflicted the injuries complained of. The evidence is undisputed that the proper manner to erect such a pole as the one in question, about twenty-five feet in height, was to embed it at least five feet deep in the earth. This pole stood on the side of a bank and was only twenty-two inches below the soil on one side and eighteen on the other, the difference representing the slope of the. bank. There was no evidence as to how deep it had been originally planted, but there was evidence that the soil about its base had been washed away by rains from time to time, and that the condition existing at the time of the accident accordingly was tlie result either of an original insecure mode of erection or of the wearing away of the supporting earth by the lapse of time, or of both. ■ There was no evidence of any system of inspection or of any actual inspection. The pole was sound and exhibited no appearance of danger. There was evidence that the earth had been dug away from the pole by one of the plaintiff’s fellow-workmen before he ascended and that he was warned of the danger, but this story was denied by the plaintiff and rejected by the jury.
The learned counsel for the defendent urges with characteristic force and persuasiveness that the plaintiff’s bill .of particulars limits him to the assertion of the defendant’s negligence only in respect to the washing away of the earth around the base of the pole, and that it was, therefore, error on the part of the trial court to instruct the jury that a recovery might be had if “ the pole when erected- by the defendant was unsafely put up,” as well as unsafely maintained. The complaint and the bill of particulars, however, each charge both grounds of negligence. .The complaint alleges that the defendant failed to furnish the plaintiff with a safe place to work, “ in not setting said pole a sufficient distance in the earth,” and in allowing u the dirt around the base of said pole to be washed or scraped away, so that the said pole, so improperly set as aforesaid, did not remain in the ground a sufficient distance to keep it firm,” etc. The bill of particulars specifies the same two separate and distinct grounds of negligence, and in substantially the language of the complaint. There was accordingly no error committed by the court in permitting the jury to find an inadequate setting of the -
The appellant further claims that the line of telegraph in question was condemned and was being - removed as “ old, decayed and defective,” and that the employees being, therefore, engaged at the time in work of a known dangerous and unusual character, the rule as to a safe place has no application. Without devoting time to an analysis of the cases cited in support of this contention, it is sufficient to say that, the claim is unsupported by the evidence. The removal of the line from one side of the road to the other would seem to have been prompted quite as much for convenience in operation as from any other motive, and while some peril was of course incident to the process, there is no suggestion, beyond the evidence heretofore referred to, which the jury did not believe, tending to indicate that the plaintiff anticipated, or reasonably should have anticipated, danger from the particular cause which occasioned the accident.
The judgment and order should be affirmed.
Present — Goodrich, P.. J., Woodward, Hirschberg, Jenks and Sewell, JJ.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.