Marion Light & Heating Co. v. Vermillion

Myers, J.

— Appellee brought this action against the Marion Light and Heating Company, appellant, the Central Union Telephone Company, and the United Telephone Company, to recover damages on account of the death of his decedent, caused by the alleged negligence of appellant and its codefendants. Issues were formed and submitted to a jury for trial, resulting in a verdict in favor of plaintiff, and against defendant, Marion Light and Heating Company, and in favor of the Central Union Telephone Company and the United Telephone Company. ' The jury with its general verdict returned answers to sixty-seven interrogatories. Defendant Marion Light and Heating Company appealed to this court from the judgment rendered against it, assigning as error the overruling of its motion for judgment in its favor on the answers of the jury to the interrogatories, notwithstanding the general verdict.

1. In order to sustain this appeal, the answers of the jury must exhibit facts precluding appellee’s recovery notwithstanding every presumption and intendment in favor of the general verdict, and against such answers. Wright v. Chicago, etc., R. Co. (1903), 160 Ind. 583, 66 N. E. 454; Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Leachman (1903), 161 Ind. 512, 69 N. E. 253; Princeton Coal, etc., Co. v. Roll (1904), 162 Ind. 115, 66 N. E. 169; Smith v. Michigan Cent. R. Co. (1905), 35 Ind. App. 188, 73 N. E. 928.

The complaint is exceedingly long, and we will attempt to refer only to such facts therein as will tend to indicate the questions for decision. The complaint shows that defendant, Marion Light and Heating Company, at the time *681of the accident in question, was engaged at the city of Marion in producing and generating electric currents and furnishing the same to its customers for light, heat and power purposes, and that its codefendants were conducting a general telephone business in the same city. Said defendant and its codefendants, in conducting their respective businesses, each operated and controlled a system of wires, supported by poles situated along and upon Railroad avenue, one of the public streets of said city, and under a joint arrangement a certain pole on said avenue was used by each of them for maintaining and operating its system of wires, each company having the right to go upon sai'd pole, and repair, adjust and change its wires and appliances thereon; and for that purpose, or in the control of said wires, the employes and servants of the respective companies would frequently climb said pole. On August 27, 1906, the day of the accident, there was attached to said pole a double steel or copper wire extending from said telephone wire downward to within about six feet of the earth, and formerly used as a “ground wire.” The use of this wire had been abandoned for years, and there was no apparent indication to employes and others having business on said pole that it had any ground connection. There was no other wire -or conductor of electricity leading down said pole. About eleven feet above the ground a' cable or guy-wire was looped around said pole in such a way that it came in contact with that portion of said ground wire connected with the wires of the telephone company, and otherwise so constructed that it connected with another guy-wire leading to the ground from another pole, thereby furnishing a ground connection for said abandoned wire at a point 100 feet distant from the first pole; that the connections thus made, forming a ground or metallic circuit with the earth, were so hidden that they were not open to ordinary observation ; that decedent had no notice or knowledge of the dangerous condition of said pole and wire by reason of their *682connections, nor was the same discoverable by the exercise of ordinary care, and appellant had full knowledge thereof; that on the day and at the time of the accident, appellee’s decedent was, and for about three weeks prior thereto had been in the employ of appellant as a lineman; that immediately prior to the accident, appellant, knowing the dangerous condition of said wire connection aforesaid, negligently and carelessly ordered, directed and required decedent to go on said pole for the purpose of repairing and adjusting its wires, and carelessly and negligently failed to give him any warning or notice whatever of said defects, conditions or danger; that said decedent, in obedience to said orders, and in the performance of his work, by the aid. of what is known as “climbers,” constructed out of steel or iron, ascended said pole, and began the work of taping or repairing appellee’s wires supported by said pole, and carrying a high and dangerous voltage of electricity; that while thus engaged, one of said climbers, which was strapped to his leg and foot, came in contact with said abandoned ground wire, which, in connection with said guy-wires formed a circuit, whereby he received from appellant’s wires a voltage of electricity, which passed through his body causing his death.

2. Appellant insists that the complaint proceeds on the sole theory that decedent was set to work by appellant in an unsafe place, and that the answers of the jury to interrogatories show that the place was made unsafe by decedent himself. In support of this contention we are referred to certain interrogatories and answers thereto, which read as follows: “ (65) Was said ground wire cut off below its connection with said guy wire on said first mentioned pole prior to the date of the decedent’s death? A. — No. (66) Who cut off said ground wire below said guy wire? A. — Decedent, by order of foreman. (67) How long had said ground wire been cut off below said guy wire before the decedent received his injury? A. — Within an *683hour.” From other answers it appears that for five years decedent had been engaged in placing cross-arms on poles, erecting and repairing electric wires, and was an experienced wire lineman; that he knew the danger of handling and working with high-tension electric wires, and was at the time of the accident in the full possession of all his faculties; that immediately preceding the accident, at the request of his foreman, he ascended the pole supporting telephone wires and the high-tension wires of appellant, for the purpose of fastening a cross-arm thereon. Fastened to this pole was a cable box about twenty or twenty-five feet above the ground. To the south of this pole, about thirty-three feet, was located a second pole, and about fifty feet to the west or northwest of the second pole was a third pole, known as a“ stub pole ”. To the first pole, and about eleven feet above the ground, was fastened a guy-wire, extending to the top of the second pole, and in connection with another guy-wire to the stub pole, and thence into the ground. The ground wire consisted of three copper wires wrapped together and stapled to the first pole, extending downward from said cable box to a point about ten or eleven feet above the ground, and said guy-wire was so fastened to said first pole as to form a contact with said ground wire; that decedent, before attempting to attach said cross-arm, cut said ground wire below the cable box, and turned the same out of his way; that while he was working on said pole, attaching the cross-arm, he was ordered by his foreman to repair the insulation on one of appellant’s high-tension wires, by wrapping tape around it. While attempting to make the repair in the manner - stated, with his bare hands, one of the steel or iron spears or climbers^ strapped on his shoe, came in contact with the ground wire on said pole, and immediately an electric current passed through his body, causing his death.

*6843. 2. 4. *683The general verdict amounts to a finding that all the material allegations of the complaint are true. There is no *684claim of more than one so-called ground wire attaclied to the pole on which decedent was working at the time of the accident. The complaint shows that this wire did not extend down the pole to the ground, and that it was an abandoned wire, and these facts must be taken as true, unless the answers of the jury are in irreconcilable conflict therewith. The answers show that decedent, by order of the foreman, cut off “said ground wire” below its connection with the guy-wire. But these facts, unaided by inferences, do not amount to a finding that the wire so severed by decedent at that time extended to the ground, and inferences in aid 'of such special findings are not allowed. Flutter v. New York, etc., R. Co. (1901), 27 Ind. App. 511, 59 N. E. 337; Morford v. Chicago, etc., R. Co. (1902), 158 Ind. 494, 63 N. E. 857; Indianapolis Gas Co. v. Shumack (1899), 23 Ind. App. 87, 54 N. E. 414.

5. 6. The contention of appellant cannot be sustained for another reason. It will be observed that the complaint charges appellant with negligently maintaining a hidden and concealed metallic connection between said ground wire and the ground, thereby making the place where decedent was ordered to work unsafe and dangerous. It appears that this condition was known to appellant, and unknown to decedent, and that he could not have known it by the exercise of ordinary care. The answers fail to negative either of these facts as to knowledge, but, on the contrary, tend to support the general verdict in that particular. Decedent had a right to rely on the master doing its duty. ITe had no reason to expect that the master would increase the ordinary hazards of his engagement without his knowledge, and then fail to warn him of such dangers. If we assume, as appellant contends, that the ground wire extended down the pole and into the ground, and that it was severed, and the ground connection *685therewith broken by decedent, and that the jury so found, these facts, as they appear to us, would tend to support the conclusion that the ground connection was broken for the purpose of making the place safe rather than unsafe, and ought to have no controlling influence when it certainly appears that the cutting of the wire had nothing whatever to do with causing the accident.

7. Appellant also insists that the facts disclosed by the answers to the interrogatories show such a heedless indifference by decedent of the apparent danger, as to preelude a recovery on the ground of assumed risk. This contention is based on additional answers of the jury, to the effect that among the accessories, tools and equipment furnished by appellant for use by decedent and the crew of linemen with whom he was working on the day of his death were rubber gloves, which were nonconductors of electricity, and by decedent known to be such, as well as their purpose and use, and that he knew it was dangerous to handle high-tension wires “under certain conditions” without wearing them; that his failure to wear such gloves while attempting to repair the insulation on appellant’s wires “contributed proximately to the cause of his death.”

8. It is clear from these answers that “under certain conditions” it is dangerous to handle wires highly charged with electricity without wearing rubber gloves, but it is not shown whether these conditions were present and known to decedent, or could have been known to him by the exercise of ordinary care at the time he undertook to tape the wire. The decedent by his contract of employment assumed the risks naturally incident to the service for which he was employed, and those known to him or which he should discover in the exercise of ordinary care. As said in the case of Salem Stone, etc., Co. v. Griffin (1894), 139 Ind. 141, 148, 38 N. E. 411: “Those dangers which are unknown to the servant, and not dis*686coverable by Mm with ordinary care, but which are, or by ordinary care of the master should be, known to him, are not assumed.”

7. The answers show that decedent went up the pole for the purpose of placing thereon a cross-arm.- It does not appear that this work was hazardous, or that his original purpose on the pole was to handle the high-tension wires. The order to perforin this servicie came later, but while he was still on the pole, and it was while he was so engaged in this latter service that the accident happened. He was twenty-five feet from the ground, and from all appearances observable to him there was no danger in taping the wire in the manner he was doing it. The only danger, in fact, was the secret contact of wires unknown to him, and known to the master. There is no answer showing that in the absence of the secret and concealed ground connection there was any danger in doing the work without wearing rubber gloves.

9. 10. While the law makes it the duty of the employe for his own safety to use care commensurate with the obvious danger incident to his employment, and will exonerate the master in case the employe is injured through his failure to observe the danger which ordinary diligence would discover, yet he does not assume the increased risks and hazards of the master’s negligence in failing to warn him of latent dangers known to the master and unknown to the servant.

11. From these considerations, we think it possible to reconcile the answers of the jury to a state of facts provable under the issues in this cause, and if so, the answers are not in irreconcilable conflict with the general verdict. Wright v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., supra; City of South Bend v. Turner (1901), 156 Ind. 418, 60 N. E. 271, 54 L. R. A. 396, 83 Am. St. 200. Appellants motion for judgment was therefore properly overruled.

Judgment affirmed.