149 Iowa 303 | Iowa | 1910
The plaintiff’s intestate had been in the employ of the defendant for several months before his death. The evidence shows that during the time of his employment he had worked in different parts of the plant. He helped as a machinist and fired in the boiler room. He fired in the gas plant, and fired the gas-producing engine. He also performed work as a wiper, and, when there was nothing else to do, helped to clean up the engines and the machinery generally. In short, the evidence tends to show that he was a man of all work about the building, in so far as such work could be done by a nonexpert electrician. At the time in question, he was working on a shift that kept him there until one o’clock at night. At about fifteen minutes of one in the morning of the night of February 12, 1908, some of the lights in the boiler room went out. The plant was at that time in charge of the chief engineer, C. H. Snook, who was at the time the lights went out in the
We think there was sufficient evidence to take the case to the jury on the question of the defendant’s negligence. There was evidence tending to prove that, when the wires carrying the arc circuit were placed on the polp in question, they were permitted to sag so that they came in contact with the wires carrying the secondary circuit, and the wires carrying electricity into the boiler room.
There is nothing in the claim that the deceased assumed the risk of taking hold of this electric wire charged with two thousand volts of electricity. It may be true that he assumed the risk of taking hold of a wire charged with one hundred and ten or two hundred and twenty volts of electricity, but it can not be said from anything which appears in this record that he assumed the risk of contact with a highly overcharged wire.
We think, on the whole record, that this case was one that should have been submitted to the jury, and that the court erred in directing a verdict for the defendant. The judgment is therefore reversed.