120 Kan. 123 | Kan. | 1926
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action by Willis E. Smith against the TriCounty Light & Power Company for damages for the loss of a barn and contents caused by fire, alleged to have resulted from negligence of defendant. It was tried to a jury, which answered special questions and returned a- general verdict for plaintiff. Defendant’s motion for judgment in its 'favor on the special findings, notwithstanding 'dhe general verdict, was sustained, and plaintiff has appealed.
“1. If you find the transformer in question was defective at the time of and immediately prior to the fire which destroyed plaintiff’s .barn, was such defective condition probably caused by lightning? A. Yes.
“3. Did the plaintiff, Smith, after the four o’clock fire direct Tucker to fix up or repair the defects in the transformer or house or barn wiring so) that plaintiff could safely have lights? A. Yes.
“5. Did Witness Tucker fix burned out wires and broken insulator at barn or repair said wiring defects at house after four o’clock fire? A. No.
“6. Did Mrs. Smith, wife of plaintiff, tell Tucker after four o’clock fire, in substance, that she was afraid of the electricity and that she did not want wires repaired or fixed up? A. Yes.
“7. Do you find that the defendant company had any actual knowledge of an excessive voltage passing through said plaintiff’s transformer prior to the occurrence of said ten o’clock fire? A. No.
“10. If your verdict is for the plaintiff, state fully the items or acts of negligence' on the part of said defendant upon which you base your verdict. A. Defendant did not properly and safely install transformers as contracted between Howard, an officer of defendant, and Smiths.
“11. (Itemized the loss.)
“12. Did plaintiff have, at and after the afternoon fire, a stick or contrivance for safely pulling the transformer switch? A. Yes.
“13. Could plaintiff have pulled the transformer switch after the afternoon fire and thereby prevented excess voltage from entering his house and bam? A. Yes.
“15. Was there any ground wire installed on this pole where the transformer was situated at the time of and immediately before the first fire on April 25, 1924? A. No.
“15%. Did the defendant company wrongfully, carelessly and negligently fail to maintain a ground wire on or near the pole where the transformer was situated, connecting the transformer or wiring in connection therewith to the ground at the times of the fires on April 25, 1924? A. Yes.
“16. At the times of the fires in question on April 25, 1924, did the defendant company maintain this transformer in a careless and negligent manner in that defendant company failed to install or have installed about such transformer, safety devices, wiring and apparatus in such a manner as to prevent an excess voltage of electric current from entering the house and barn of the plaintiff? A. Yes.
“17. If N. E. Tucker had made a reasonable investigation which an ordinarily prudent electric lineman under similar circumstances would have made would he have discovered the defective condition of the transformer or the wiring in or about the transformer that existed after the four o’clock fire on April 25, 1924? A. Yes.
*126 “18. If N. E. Tucker had properly remedied the defect if any, existing in the transformer after such four o’clock fire on April 25, 1924, or if he had disconnected or isolated such transformer from the plaintiff Smith’s house and bam, would plaintiff Smith have suffered the damages which occurred on the night fire of April 25, 1924? A. No.
“19. Did Mr. Tucker learn in the afternoon of April 25, 1924, that some defect existed in the wiring or equipment that caused danger of fire breaking out in the barn of plaintiff? A. Yes.
“20. If you answer the next preceding question in the affirmative, then state what precautions were taken by the company, if any, to ascertain and remedy or remove the cause which might again result in the breaking out of fire in the buildings of plaintiff? A. Turned off current.
. “21. After learning of the fact that a danger of fire existed in the afternoon of April 25, 1924, by the said Mr. Tucker, did he tell plaintiff, or members of his family that it was safe for them to use the electric current, if they so desired? A. Yes.
“22. If you find that the injury sustained by plaintiff Smith on April 25, 1924, was the result of any contributory negligence on Smith’s part, then state what such negligence on Smith’s part consisted of. A.
“23. Was one N. E. Tucker the agent of the defendant company on April 25, 1924? A. Yes.
“24. Did defendant company acting through its agents and employees, install-the transformers on this pole near plaintiff’s house? A. Yes.
“26. Did plaintiff Smith and defendant company enter into a verbal agreement that defendant company would install, care for and look after the transformers on the pole where such transformer was situated? A. Yes.”
The general verdict was for plaintiff in the sum of $1,156. Defendant moved to set aside special findings of the jury numbered 9, 14, 23 and 25. The court sustained the motion as to findings numbered 9, 14 and 25, but overruled it as to finding number 23. Defendant then moved for judgment in its favor upon the answers to the special questions, notwithstanding the general verdict. This motion was sustained; plaintiff complains of that ruling. When a motion is made for judgment on the special findings, notwithstanding the general verdict, the rule, of course, is that the special findings shall be considered in such a way as to harmonize them with each other and with the general verdict, if that can reasonably be done. (Calvin v. Schaff, Receiver, 118 Kan. 196, 200, 234 Pac. 1006, and cases there cited.) If this cannot be done, i. e., if the special findings are so inconsistent with the general verdict that both cannot stand, the general verdict must be set aside. Now, looking at the special findings, what is there in them that is so inconsistent with the general verdict as to defeat it? Our attention is called to special findings numbered 12 and 13, in which the jury found that
Upon the main question at issue, as shown by the pleadings, as to who installed this transformer and whose duty it was to see that it was propex-ly installed and properly kept in repair, the answers of the jmy are favorable to the plaintiff and against the defendant. Defendant in this court has reargued many of those questions, but we shall not examine the evidence to see whether or not those findings were correct in view of the fact that, as to most of them, there was not even a motion on behalf of defendant to set them aside, and they have been approved by the trial court. The result is that there is nothing in the special findings so out of harmony with the general
Plaintiff raises one 'other question. He moved for a new trial upon the amount of damages only. This was overruled. Upon this point his contention is that all of the evidence before the jury fixed the value of the barn burned at $2,000, while the jury found its value to be $900. It is true that each witness who placed a value upon the barn in his testimony, placed such value at $2,000, but that is not all of the evidence before the jury as to the value of the barn. Its description was given in detail. Its size, the material of which it was built, the fact that it had been built seventeen years, all furnished ground upon which the jury could base a judgment as to its value, even though no witness had stated a specific sum as to the value. While the jury might have found a different value on the barn, they had evidence to sustain the finding which was made.
The judgment of the court below will be reversed with directions to enter judgment upon the general verdict of the jury.