Davis v. City of Independence.

49 S.W.2d 95, 330 Mo. 201, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 711
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 8, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 49 S.W.2d 95 (Davis v. City of Independence.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. City of Independence., 49 S.W.2d 95, 330 Mo. 201, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 711 (Mo. 1932).

Opinions

This is an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by respondent while he was in the service of appellant, a municipal corporation. In the course of his employment, respondent, a lineman, climbed an electric light pole owned by appellant for the purpose of transferring wires from it to an adjacent pole. That pole to which respondent was clinging in the performance of his work broke off at the base and fell, respondent going down with it. Respondent recovered judgment for $15,000, and appellant appealed to this court.

It was undisputed that the pole which fell with respondent showed upon examination after the fall that it was rotten at the base. The pole was in position at the northeast corner of Fair Avenue and Noland Street in Independence When respondent ascended the pole there were near the top of it at right angles to each other two cross arms to which were attached wires running north and south and east and west respectively. When the crew of linemen reached the *Page 207 corner stated, the foreman, Jim Wells, gave the general order to transfer the wires from the one pole to the other. Two linemen who were the first to get on their climbing spurs and safety belts ascended the pole to which the wires were to be transferred. Respondent whose equipment had been beneath that of his fellow workmen in a box in the truck of the crew, outfitted himself with safety belt, climbers and tools and climbed the pole from which the wires were to be detached. It was essential that a man or men ascend both poles in order to carry out the foreman's directions to his crew to transfer the wires. Respondent and the two men on the other pole were the only linemen in the crew except Wells, the foreman. They and respondent were first-class linemen of some years experience and the only ones qualified to go aloft. The top of the old pole which respondent ascended was approximately 28 or 30 feet from the ground. The other pole to which the wires were to be transferred was five or six feet higher. The foreman, Wells, stood below and watched the work of his men aloft and also of two ground men who did the tasks of helpers. Wells at all times was about twenty feet from the foot of the pole upon which respondent was working.

On his own behalf respondent testified that according to custom he climbed the pole about ten feet and shook it to determine its stability. It gave no sign of weakness. He then climbed to the top, adjusted his safety belt and worked there several hours. The day was cold and the ground was frozen and covered with snow. Respondent, in the performance of his part of the work of transfer, removed all except two or three of the wires fixed to the cross-arms of the old pole, spliced them with additional wire to give the wires a greater length needed upon the new pole, and passed the wires to his fellow workmen upon the nearby pole by means of a hand line. Respondent then descended the pole half way and, according to his own testimony, he inquired of the foreman Wells: "Do you want to strip this pole?" The foreman answered: "Yes, we have time. Go back up and take off the remaining wires." Respondent next asked the foreman whether the pole was safe. To this question, according to respondent, Wells answered: "Sure, I set that pole when we built the Rock Line." Testimony for both respondent and appellant made it obvious that wire-carrying poles are guyed and made more secure by the attached wires and, especially when, as in this case, the wires ran in four directions. Respondent further testified that upon the assurance given by the foreman and with his knowledge that the Rock Line had been built only three years, be ascended the pole again to the cross-arm to which the remaining three wires were affixed.

He cut one or two of these wires and was in an unright position at the level of the cross-arm with his climbing spurs sunk into the pole and his body leaning against his safety belt which encircled the pole when the pole broke off at its base and fell to the ground carrying *Page 208 respondent with it in a northeasterly direction. According to respondent and other witnesses who testified on his behalf, respondent was on the under side of the pole when it fell, held to it by his safety belt and by his spurs. The pole, upon striking the ground, fell upon him the full length of his body over his right side and across the right side of his head and his face. The pole rebounded and when it settled again to the ground the testimony on behalf of respondent was to the effect that he was clear of it, but was still held by his belt and imbedded spurs. He was released from the pole by his fellow workmen and was taken to the office of the city physician for treatment. Respondent also testified that it was the custom in the city light department of appellant for the foreman in charge of a crew of linemen to test poles which were to be stripped of wires by sounding them near the base with pointed iron bars and also by digging about such poles for a distance of six inches or more from the surface of the ground, for the purpose of examination of the wood. It was testified also that such poles, if found to be of doubtful safety, were sustained by means of upstanding pikes and also by means of supporting ropes affixed to a nearby pole and that all of this precautionary work was the duty of the foreman.

On behalf of appellant, the foreman, Jim Wells, denied the conversation with respondent respecting the safety of the pole and Wells' assurance that it was "safe" as he had set it. The two linemen who were upon the other pole testified they did not hear any such conversation between respondent and Wells. Several other witnesses confirmed respondent's version of the conversation. The two other linemen and Wells also denied that it was the duty and the custom of foremen to test poles for safety. They testified that it was the practice for the lineman ascending a pole to make all necessary and proper tests for his own safety, particularly when the pole was to be stripped of wires. They also testified that when the pole fell and hit the ground and also when it rebounded, respondent was on top of and not underneath the pole. The trial lasted eight days and the record contains over a thousand pages. It follows as of course that there are many assignments of error. In the examination of some of these there will be a further narrative of facts.

Respondent in his petition stated as specifications of negligence that appellant failed to use ordinary care to provide and maintain a reasonably safe place to work; that the place (i.e., the old pole) was unsafe and dangerous; that the foreman negligently failed to inspect the pole to ascertain its stability and safety before ordering plaintiff to ascend, although the pole was rotten at the base, a fact which the foreman knew or could have known by the use of ordinary care; that appellant was also negligent in failing to prop up the pole with pikes or to tie it up. Respondent also set up as a further ground of negligence the inquiry of respondent whether the pole was safe *Page 209 if stripped of wires and the assurance of the foreman that it was safe. Appellant in its answer admitted that it was a municipal corporation and denied all other allegations of the petition. As affirmative defenses, appellant pleaded in its answer that under the terms of his employment it was the duty of respondent to inspect poles before climbing them and to make a pole reasonably safe and secure, in case that, upon his inspection he should find it to be unsafe to climb by reason of decay or rot or otherwise, and that respondent by these terms of his employment assumed the risk of poles becoming old and unsafe for climbing.

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.W.2d 95, 330 Mo. 201, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-city-of-independence-mo-1932.