Appellee Ambre brought this action in the Lake Superior Court against the Postal Telegraph-Cable Company and the appellant, to recover damages for personal injuries received on August 31, 1904, while a lineman employed by the telegraph company, and while engaged in the line of his duty searching for trouble on a certain wire of said company carried on a line of poles used jointly by the telegraph company and the electric company in the city of Hammond. The lower cross-arms were used by the electric company and the upper cross-arms by the telegraph company. The trouble on the line was what is known as a “ground,” which rendered the line useless for the transmission of messages beyond such point. The only way the plaintiff knew to test a “ground” at that point was to climb the pole, carrying a wire long enough to reach to the earth, and make a test by signaling the nearest telegraph station. While engaged in his work at that time and place he received a shock of electricity, which knocked him from said pole, resulting in the injuries complained of.
Upon affidavit of the telegraph company a change of venue was taken to Porter county, and upon the affidavit of plaintiff the venue was again changed to Laporte Superior Court, where the case was tried by jury. A general verdict was *437returned in favor of the plaintiff and against the electric company, and in favor of the telegraph company for costs against said plaintiff. With the general verdict the jury returned answers to interrogatories. Prom the judgment against said plaintiff and in favor of the telegraph company an appeal was taken to this court, and at this term reversed. (See Ambre v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co. [1909], 43 Ind. App. 47.) Appellant’s motions for judgment non obstante veredicto, for a new trial, and in arrest were overruled, and judgment was rendered on the verdict against appellant.
These rulings are assigned as error.
1. The objections to the complaint are: (1) That it discloses no duty which the appellant owed to the appellee Ambre, the breach of which is charged to have been negligence resulting in his injury; (2) that it does not charge that the failure of appellant to insulate the joints on its wires was the proximate cause of appellee’s injury. Without commending the complaint, we are of the opinion that it is sufficient to bar another action for the same cause, and the defects are such as might be supplied by proof. The motion in arrest was, therefore, not well taken. Chappell v. Shuee (1889), 117 Ind. 481, 486, 487; Lockhart v. Schlotterback (1895), 12 Ind. App. 683, 684; Rawles v. State, ex rel. (1877), 56 Ind. 433, 442, 443; Ohio, etc., R. Co. v. Smith (1892), 5 Ind. App. 560, 562; Sims v. Dame (1888), 113 Ind. 127.
2. Under the rules that inconsistent answers to interrogatories annul one another, and that all reasonable presumptions are indulged in favor of a general verdict, appellant’s motion for judgment, notwithstanding the general verdict, was properly overruled. There are many reasons, set out in the motion for a new trial and discussed by counsel, predicated upon the admission of, and the refusal to admit, certain evidence; upon the giving, and refusing to give, certain instructions; and upon the conduct of counsel in the course of the argument *438to the jury. These questions may not arise upon another trial, and we have not found it necessary to consider them.
3. Interrogatory eighteen reads as follows: “Was there any practical method of insulating said wires of the electric company at said time and place which would have prevented the escape of a current of 2,300 volts into a bare, grounded wire touching said insulated wire ? ’ ’ The jury returned an improper answer, and were required by the court to reanswer. They then returned the answer: “The evidence is not sufficient to warrant an answer.” Appellant again moved that the court require the jury to re-answer said interrogatory, but said motion was overruled and exception taken. The evidence was sufficient to warrant the answering of the question by either “yes” or “no.” The electric company’s superintendent testified on cross-examination that insulation is for protection where the line carries a low voltage, but as to high voltage, if the wires swung together insulation would not prevent their crossing, because “there is no outside insulation made on wires that are strung on poles that would keep that [high current] from getting through. ’ ’ This testimony was uncontradicted.
Interrogatory nineteen and the answer thereto are substantially the same as interrogatory eighteen and answer.
4. Interrogatory fifty-four and its answer read: “Name all the wires of the defendant electric company on its top cross-arm which were carrying currents of electricity at the time plaintiff was shocked; number them from the east end of the cross-arm. A. No positive evidence. ’ ’ Two witnesses testified and identified the wires on the plat of the pole. The answer, “No positive evidence,” was a misstatement.
5. Interrogatory thirty-eight and its answer read: “Did plaintiff up to the time of his injury know that insulation in practical use would not prevent the escape of a 2,300 volt current, if it were grounded? A. No.”
The plaintiff testified that he knew it was dangerous to *439carry a bare wire between insulated wires carrying a current; that it was dangerous to go near insulated wires that were charged with electricity, and that it depended upon the strength of the current, whether the insulation would prevent the escape of the current.
It was not reversible error not to require the jury to re-answer interrogatory eighteen, yet the answers to interrogatories eighteen, nineteen, thirty-eight and fifty-four show an indifference to the evidence, upon the part of the jury, which, if not hostile to appellant, was, at least, most friendly to appellee Ambre.
Prom plaintiff’s testimony it appears that he knew that a wire carrying 300 or more volts was dangerous; that the wires on the lower cross-arms held electric light wires (the complaint alleged that he did not know it) ; that he knew they were insulated, and that insulation meant that probably there was a current there at some time; that at the time he went there he thought they were dead wires; that if he had known they were charged with electricity he would not have gone up there, because it was dangerous; that none of the employes of the electric company ever told him there was no current there; that he “just assumed they were dead wires” when he went up there that day; that he paid no attention whatever to these wires; that his eyesight was good before the injury, and the only reason he didn’t observe the surroundings was that they were of no interest to him; that his work was on this pole, and had nothing to do with the other lines; that he pulled the wire up to the first cross-arm used by the electric company, then went to the top of the pole and came down over the cross-arms, took hold of the wire he had left on the lower cross-arms, pulled it up between the wires of the electric company near the east end of the cross-arms; that he placed one foot between the wires of the electric company — the other leg was over the lower cross-arm of the telegraph company — dragged his wire between these wires, without any regard to them — as though they *440were not there — although there was an eighteen-inch space between the pins; that he paid no attention to what was on the pole, and gave no thought to it whatever.
Appellant earnestly insists that appellee Ambre’s testimony shows that he was guilty of contributory negligence, but that apart from his contributory negligence he could not recover, because the evidence shows it to have been a physical impossibility, from his position, to receive the shock from the joints; that he must have received it from the insulated wire, and as it was alleged that there was lack of insulation only at the joints, such finding would not be warranted by the complaint; that the evidence shows that there was plenty of room to rest his foot on the cross-arm without coming near the electric company’s joints; that the jury found that if he had looked he could have seen the bare joints in time to avoid coming in contact with them.
6. While we do not feel justified in directing judgment on the answers to interrogatories, yet in view of the whole record, the finding of facts, the evasive answers to some of the interrogatories, and the unwarranted answers to others, we are of the opinion that the end of justice will be best subserved by granting a new trial.
7. The jury seem to have had the impression that it was the duty of the appellant to give notice to appellee Ambre, or to any one having occasion to do any work upon the pole in question, that it was using, or about to use, a strong current of electricity over its wires, and that unless appellant informed him of the presence of a high current of electricity he (said appellee) would not be guilty of contributory negligence. Appellant did not owe this duty to said appellee. It did, however, owe him the duty of properly insulating its wires. Griffin v. United Electric Light Co. (1895), 164 Mass. 492, 41 N. E. 675, 32 L. R. A. 400, 49 Am. St. 477; Geismann v. Missouri Edison Electric Co. (1903), 173 Mo. 654, 73 S. W. 654; Fitzgerald v. Edison Electric, etc., Co. (1901), 200 Pa. St. 540 (s.c. Will v. Edi*441son Electric, etc., Co.), 50 Atl. 161, 86 Am. St. 732; Winkelman v. Kansas City Electric Light Co. (1905), 110 Mo. App. 184, 85 S. W. 99; Thomas v. Wheeling Electrical Co. (1903), 54 W. Va. 395, 46 S. E. 217; Dallas Electric Co. v. Mitchell (1903), 33 Tex. Civ. App. 424, 76 S. W. 935; Newark Electric, etc., Co. v. Garden (1896), 78 Fed. 74, 23 C. C. A. 649, 37 L. R. A. 725; Lexington R. Co. v. Fain (1903), 24 Ky. Law 1443, 71 S. W. 628; Standard Light, etc., Co. v. Muncey (1903), 33 Tex. Civ. App. 416, 76 S. W. 931.
8. Recovery, if had, must be upon the breach of duty charged in the complaint.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to sustain appellant ’s motion for a new trial, and for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.