110 Mo. App. 184 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1905
— Plaintiff instituted his action against defendant for damages resulting to him by reason of coming in contact with one of defendant’s electric wires. The judgment was for plaintiff in the trial court.
It appears that plaintiff was on what is known as a swinging scaffold hung down beside the brick wall of a building and was engaged, with a trowel and mortar, in repointing the wall. The defendant’s wires
. There are various degrees of care required in different jurisdictions with reference to the various dangerous appliances and methods now in use. In some courts it is held, even as to such exceedingly dangerous appliances as electricity, that “ordinary care,” or, ‘ ‘ reasonable care, ’ ’ is what is required. "While in others an extraordinary degree of care is required. That is to say, something more than mere reasonable care. The case of Geismann v. Missouri Electric Co., 173 Mo. 654, 678, undoubtedly puts this State with the latter class, for it is there expressly said that the law requires more than keeping the wires reasonably safe.
In our opinion the rule established by that decision is that the utmost degree of care (more than ordinary care) should be used both in insulating the wires and in keeping them insulated. When the court uses the expression in the first part of the paragraph, ‘ ‘ reasonably accessible,” it was meant, reasonably, in view of the extraordinarily dangerous appliance. In dealing with some ordinary appliance, only ordinarily dangerous, much less effort would be considered a reasonable effort than if the appliance was one of the most dangerous, deceptive and destructive known. So when the court said that every protection “reasonably accessible” must be used in the first place in protecting the wires, and the “utmost care should be" used to keep them so, ’ ’ the two expressions should be taken to mean the same thing — a statement of the same matter in different words. Por, considering the noiseless, hidden and destructive power of electricity, a reasonable effort to control it is nothing short of the utmost effort-nothing less than the utmost would be a reasonable effort. That the court did not intend the word, “reasonably,” to mean anything different from the words,
■ We therefore hold it to he the duty of those who maintain such appliances to use the utmost care to thoroughly insulate the wires and to keep them so insulated.
We, therefore, hold that the fact that plaintiff was hurt by his contact with the wire is conclusive evidence that it was not perfectly insulated and that thereby the utmost care had not been exercised and that defendant was guilty of negligence. The authorities referred to assume that perfect insulation may he had and that the utmost care will provide it and thereby make the wires safe. [Perham v. Portland Electric Co., 33 Oregon 451, 477.]
The conclusion we have stated necessarily disposes of the points made against the judgment and it will be ordered affirmed.