137 Ky. 299 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1910
Opinion of the Court by
— Affirming.
John Wight was in the service of the Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company as a member of a take-out crew; that is, a crew whose duty it was to remove telephones from houses when the service was discontinued. Wight and a man by the name of G-oldstein constituted the crew; neither being the superior of the other. They went to take out the telephone from the house of a Mrs. Wolf on East Burnett street in Louisville. The telephone wires ran along East Burnett street on the opposite side of the street from the house, and a wire was stretched across from these wires to the instrument. The trolley wire of the Louisville Railway Company was stretched along the street on the opposite side, and next to the house, but was several feet lower than the telephone wires, so that the wire which was stretched across from the telephone wires to the house crossed the trolley wire, and was several feet above it. Wight had been engaged in the business some ten months. The house set about 10 feet back from the pavement. The wire ran from the telephone pole to the corner of the house, and then back with the house to the dining room, which was two o: three rooms back, and the instrument was in the dining room. They took out the instrument and dis connected the wire from the house at the point
It is insisted for the plaintiff that the master is responsible because the wire was not insulated and Wight received his injury by reason of the absence of insulation. The proof shows that wires like this, when passing about heavily charged wires like the trolley, should be removed either by the men using insulated pinchers or by making a coil in the wire
The rule that the master must use ordinary care to furnish the servant a reasonably safe place to work is subject to the exception that the servant takes the risks resulting from changes made by the servant himself in the ordinary progress of the work. Smith v. North Jellico Coal Co., 131 Ky. 196, 114 S. W. 785. Here the place where the servant was to work was perfectly safe when he began the work. The danger that aróse was caused wholly by the act of the servant and his fellow servant in the progress of the work. They alone were directing the work. Servants who pull down or dismantle houses or other structures acting- under a general direction to
Judgment affirmed.