Gloucester Electric Co. v. Dover

153 F. 139, 82 C.C.A. 291, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4389
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedFebruary 18, 1907
DocketNo. 683
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 153 F. 139 (Gloucester Electric Co. v. Dover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gloucester Electric Co. v. Dover, 153 F. 139, 82 C.C.A. 291, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4389 (1st Cir. 1907).

Opinion

ADDRICH, District Judge.

At the time of the injury complained of the Gloucester Electric Company, the defendant below, maintained an electric lighting system in and about the city of Gloucester, and Joseph R. Dover, the plaintiff below, was an employé of the New England Telephone & Telegraph Company, which maintained a system of wires in the same locality.

At the place of injury oli East Main street there were two poles, one belonging to the telephone company, and the other to the electric company, and the poles were 8 or 10 feet apart. The defendant’s pole [140]*140upon its arras and other appliances carried several insulated electric light wires, with a current of something like 2,550 volts. The telephone pole carried certain fire-alarm wires belonging to the city of Gloucester, and four bare iron wires and one cable of its own, and a second cable was being strung upon the telephone pole at the time of the injury. It was in connection with the stringing of this cable that the injury was sustained by the 'plaintiff. These poles are spoken of in the record as having a “street side,” and a “field side,” meaning, of course, that one side faces the street, and the other the field. The wires upon the two poles at this point were running in the same general direction, and the defendant’s wire which caused the injury was about SO feet from the ground, and passed the telephone pole on its street side 4 inches from-it. The cable being strung upon the telephone company's pole was to be attached at a point above the electric wire in question. The electric wire which caused the injury was bare of insulation for 3 or 5 inches on its side next to the telephone pole, and there was a charred rut or depression, 3 or 4 inches long and something like a half inch deep, across the street side of the pole opposite the wire at the point of broken insulation. The plaintiff knew in a general way of the danger of live wires, and had been cautioned about them, and he as subforeman had told men under him to be careful and look out for live wires; but there was no evidence that he actually knew that the insulation was broken on the wire in question at the time of the injury. Dover had been working on a nearby pole, and was ordered down to relieve a kink in the cable, and it became necessary in the prosecution of the work for him to ascend the pole in question to a point above the defendant’s wire which caused the injury. One Gillis was on the pole above him at the time. Before starting, the plaintiff looked up the pole to see if everything was clear so he could get up. He saw the location of the wires, and, among other things, that one of the electric wires was within 4 or 6 inches of the pole he was to climb, and, on being asked about the insulation, he said it looked to be all right. Gillis, who ascended the pole before him, testified that he supposed that they were electric wires and kept away,-that in going up the pole opposite the wire he saw the break in the insulation, and in coming down he saw where the wire had rubbed against the pole and burned it.

It is pointed out by one side that there was considerable evidence tending to show that this break in the insulation, and particularly the charred mark on the pole, could be' seen from the middle of the street some feet away, while it was suggested by the other side that such a" mark would more readily catch the eye of one standing some distance from the pole than of one who was standing at its base.

The defendant claims, first, that, though Dover was working for the telephone company, the liability of insulation of electric wires to get out of repair is so well understood, and the danger is so far within the knowledge of an experienced lineman, that it should be held that he assumed the risk or hazard incident to the defendant’s wire being maintained in proximity to those of the telephone company, for which he was working.

[141]*141We need not inquire whether the doctrine of assumption of risk, which, in its general acceptation, applies to cases between employer and employé, and involves the idea of implied contract of assumption, might, under some conditions, be extended to a case in which the injury results from a careless condition of things caused by the negligence of an outside party in respect to an outside business, because there is nothing in the nature of the plaintiff’s contract with the telephone company, or in the character of the work, so far as shown by the record, which would warrant the application of the doctrine of assumption of risk against the plaintiff and in favor of the defendant.

We think it a question of due care. So far as the defendant is concerned, it is a question of due care and reasonable circumspection in. respect to the oversight of wires known to be dangerous when out of repair in a situation where it is the duty and the right of others to go in the prosecution of their work, and, so far as the plaintiff is concerned, a question of due care in the manner of doing a rightful work in the line of duty, in a situation which he knows necessarily involves some hazard. Knowledge that wires are liable to get out of repair, and when out of repair that they are dangerous to life, is something entering into the question of care as it applies to both parties.

The defendant’s second position is that the plaintiff’s case is controlled against him by contributory negligence, and that it was so unquestionably careless for a man who knew the liability of insulation to get out of repair, and the resulting danger, to merely look and then voluntarily bring himself into contact with a wire without the safeguard of a safety belt, that contributory negligence should be ruled as a matter of law.

We do not think the negligence so clear as to warrant this. The plaintiff knew that one man had ascended the pole before him; and when he was called upon to ascend the pole and do something in the line of his work, he looked and saw the proximity of the wire to the pole which he was to ascend, and testified' that it seemed all right. He may, without thinking much of insulation, have meant by this that he thought he could climb the pole without touching the wire, because he said he went up on the field side, sliding his hands up the pole, and that he felt a sway of the pole as though the men had given a jerk and let up quick, and that was the last he remembered. If it were clear that he had seen the break in the insulation, or that he had climbed the pole and got in contact with the wire, without any intervening cause like the swaying of the pole, it would be quite a different thing. There is no evidence that he saw the lack of insulation. It is only argued that he ought to have seen it. This being so, and the unforeseen swaying of the pole being the probable cause of the contact, it reasonably, we think, became a question for the jury whether, under all the circumstances the plaintiff exercised the care of a prudent man in attempting to do what he did.

The defendant’s third point is that, if the question of the plaintiff’s care is one for the jury, it was not submitted under proper instructions, and upon this point we are compelled to hold with the defendant.

It is quite apparent, from the correct statement of . the principle by [142]

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Bluebook (online)
153 F. 139, 82 C.C.A. 291, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gloucester-electric-co-v-dover-ca1-1907.