Cosgrove v. Kennebec Light & Heat Co.

57 A. 841, 98 Me. 473, 1904 Me. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 11, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 57 A. 841 (Cosgrove v. Kennebec Light & Heat Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cosgrove v. Kennebec Light & Heat Co., 57 A. 841, 98 Me. 473, 1904 Me. LEXIS 12 (Me. 1904).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

The plaintiff, a night engineer in the service of the Oakland Manufacturing Company of Gardiner, recovered a verdict of $1,555 against the Kennebec Light and Heat Company for injuries sustained by him as the result of bringing his right hand in contact with an electric light wire in the fire-room of the Oakland Company. The case comes to this court on motion to set aside the verdict as against the evidence.

It is not in controversy that the electric lights for the engine house [475]*475of the Oakland Company were furnished by the defendant company, and the wires hung in the pump-room and the fire-room substantially as required by the agents of the Oakland Company. The electric cord or wire in the fire-room, in connection with which the accident occurred, ivas suspended from the ceiling, and when the cord was plumb the light was about five and a half feet from the steam gauges in front of the boilers, and eight or nine feet from the floor. The apron or smoke flue projected about four feet and a half over the front of the boilers. For the purpose of bringing the light nearer the steam gauges, the electric cord was drawn in from its vertical line and “triced” under this apron by the use of twine; and it had been allowed to remain in that situation until it became detached a short time before the accident. The wires for these lights came in over the boilers from the defendant’s electric light station, a few rods distant. The transformer, which reduced the high voltage current and transmitted the low voltage through these secondary lighting wires to the incandescent lamps, was also located in the electric station.

In the afternoon of February 18, 1901, the plaintiff came at the usual hour of five o’clock to commence his work as night engineer, relieving Mr. Higgins, the day engineer, of his duties. He testifies that Higgins then said to him: “‘Robert, I wouldn’t turn that button there that gives us the light in the boiler-room, for I got a shock off of it there to-day. It went right up my arm and most knocked me down on the floor.’ Says he, ‘I wouldn’t touch that button to turn the light on or off.’ ” He further states that Higgins told him to inform Berry, the defendant’s agent in charge of the electric station, that his transformer was burning out; and that thereupon he and Higgins went over to the station and he saw the transformer smoking. A few minutes later, about quarter past five, the plaintiff says he telephoned Mr. Soule, the defendant’s foreman in Gardiner, that Higgins asked him to tell Soule that his transformer was burning out, and that Soule replied, “All right.” About 5.30 or 5.40 P. M. he says he went over to the electric station again and told Berry that his transformer was burning out, that it was smoking on the wall then, and that the lights were “acting bad;” that Berry replied that he would come in and see to them after he got his [476]*476machines going; that about an hour later Berry came into the boiler-room with rubber gloves on his hands and rubber shoes on, and went up on top of the boilers, examined the wires, cut off a wire used bj the brick-layers but not then in use, and said to him: “Your lights will go all right now. ... I will go out and turn the current on, the lights on, and you draw that light in there where it belongs,” and the plaintiff said all right, he would. The plaintiff then explains the accident as follows: “I immediately got the ladder, put it up to the boiler front. While I was in the act of going up the ladder, the lights came on. The boy was at the foot of the ladder with the lantern. I was in the act of tying the string around the wire of the lamp, when my right hand came in contact with the wire and I got a shock. It made me jump and this hand came against the boiler front which formed a complete circuit through my body.” The hand was so burned that it was necessary to amputate one of- the fingers, and by falling from the ladder the plaintiff sustained a fracture of the collar bone.

Mr. Higgins, called as a witness for the plaintiff, states that when he told the plaintiff that he received a shock from the button that afternoon, he added, “if you don’t believe it, you try it;’-’ and the language of the plaintiff’s reply was: “To hell with it! I won’t touch it; I don’t like the stuff.” In answer to the special inquiry, “What did you say to him in the way of advice as to handling or not handling the wires, Higgins testifies: “I told him I wouldn’t touch it if I was him; gave him advice, that’s all.”

The plaintiff’s son, Ralph C. Cosgrove, .sixteen years of age, who stood at the foot of the ladder at the time of the accident, gives a version of it materially different from that of the plaintiff himself. He states that his father waited on the ladder until the electric light was turned on by Mr. Berry; that he tied one end of the string around the electric cord, drew the light in under the apron and tied the other end of the string around a pipe in front of the boiler to hold the light where he wanted it; that in doing this he did not take hold of the electric cord with his hands at all; that the next thing he saw, his father was hung on the wire with one hand against the face of the boiler and the other on the wire about a foot above the lamp.

[477]*477The reasonable inference from this, testimony that the plaintiff thoughtlessly and carelessly took hold of the electric cord with his hand after he had completed the act of tying it under the apron, appears to be confirmed to some extent by the testimony of Dr. Giddings, also a witness for the plaintiff, who states that the tissues were burned and scarred on the inside of the thumb and across the palm of the hand.

It satisfactorily appears from all the evidence, including the subsequent investigations, that the dangerous condition of the electric cord in the fire-room was caused by the breaking down of the insulation that separates the primary and secondary wires in the transformer at the defendant’s electric station, whereby the entire voltage of the primary current was enabled to pass into the secondary Avire which supplied the lights in the fire-room. It is not in controversy, however, that this transformer Avas purchased from a reputable concern, that it Avas of a standard pattern and approved design, and that it had not previously shoivn any indications of breaking down. It is not seriously contended, therefore, on the part of the plaintiff that any negligence or breach of duty on the part of the defendant company is established by the mere fact of the burning out of this transformer. But the plaintiff insists that notwithstanding the Avarning and advice given him by Higgins at five o’clock that afternoon, he was induced by the assurance • of Berry after the investigation made Avith the rubber gloves and by the nature of Soule’s telephone message, to believe that the danger existing at the time Higgins received a shock from the button, had been obviated; that at the time of the accident he Avas folloAving the instructions of Berry to “draw the light in where it belonged,” under the apron of the boilers, and that he Avas in the exercise of reasonable care in so doing Avhen the accident happened.

But Avithout deciding Avhether the testimony introduced by the plaintiff himself, in connection with the testimony of his son, Ralph C. Cosgrove, authorized the jury to find that the injury Avas sustained by the plaintiff Avhile following the alleged instructions of Berry to “tie the cord under Avhere it belonged,” it is proper to consider Avhether upon all the evidence iti the case the jury Avere [478]

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Bluebook (online)
57 A. 841, 98 Me. 473, 1904 Me. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cosgrove-v-kennebec-light-heat-co-me-1904.