Hargrave v. American Steel & Wire Co. of New Jersey

219 Mass. 6
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 219 Mass. 6 (Hargrave v. American Steel & Wire Co. of New Jersey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hargrave v. American Steel & Wire Co. of New Jersey, 219 Mass. 6 (Mass. 1914).

Opinion

Crosby, J.

This is an action to recover for personal injuries received by the plaintiff while employed by the defendant in the testing department of its Electrical Cable Works.

Electric cables made by the defendant were tested in this department to determine whether they would carry the required voltage of electricity, and whether they were properly insulated. The testing department consisted of a room known as section 101, in which there was a motor generator for the generating of high power electrical current which was conducted by a bare wire, known as the high tension trolley, through another room known as section 102, where there were several sets of tanks filled with water. Into these tanks were placed the coils of electric cables which were to be tested, and these coils of cables in the tanks were connected with the bare wire by means of a lead, a long pole with a hook on one end and from it an insulated wire, the other end of which was bare whereby the electric current was turned into the cables. The amount of current turned into them and any defect found in them was registered upon certain devices for that purpose in section 101. At the end of the test, if a cable were found defective it was taken to another room known as section 103, called the localizing department, where an electric current was applied to the cable to discover the spot or spots in the cable where the insulation was defective. The electrical current used in section 103 for localizing was ordinarily generated by a low power generator set in a portion of section 102 that was partitioned off from the tank room. In this portion of section 102 there were also registering devices showing the amount of current which was sent over the wires for the purpose of localizing. The means of communication between section 101 and the part of section 102 that was partitioned off was by telephone. The means of communication between the partitioned room in 102 and the localizing room in 103 was by bell.

Generally the tests in room 103, known as the "localizing department,” were made by means of the low power generator set in a portion of room 102 that had been partitioned off from the [10]*10tank room; but for at least a week before the accident this generator had been removed, and during this period the current for use in both tests in room 102 and room 103 came from the generator in room 101 and by means of the same overhead wire.

The plaintiff and four or five other men were employed in room 102. When a test was made in room 101 the practice was for one Parish, who was the foreman of the testing department, to conduct it. In this room Pulían worked under the direction of Parish; Parish would telephone to the partitioned part of room 102 to “get ready for the test.” One of the men employed in room 102, usually Bjorn, would take the message and tell some one there to “get ready” or to "connect up;” and that person would connect the cables with the high tension bare wire. This connection was made by means of the long wooden pole called a “lead,” above referred to. After these connections were made, the workman would say “All ready,” and this was telephoned by one of the employees to Pulían, who would reply, “Look out,” and then he would throw the switch and turn the current over the wire through the lead and into the cables. These tests were made by Parish, the foreman, unless he was absent. Up to the time when the low tension generator was removed there was ordinarily no danger from the high tension wire in making connections for testing, because it was not usually under voltage until after the connection had been made, but was what is known as a “dead wire.”

For at least a week before the plaintiff was hurt, because of the removal of the low tension generator the high tension wire had been used both for making the tests in the localizing department and for those made in the department where the" plaintiff was employed. There was evidence to show that on the day the plaintiff was hurt Pulían telephoned from room 101 to room 102; that Bjorn answered the call, and turned to the plaintiff and requested him to connect up for test some cables which the defendant was making for the New York Central Railroad Company; that the plaintiff assented and left the room, went into the other section of room 102, took down a lead and placed the hook upon the high tension wire overhead, with the bare end of the wire connected with the lead in his left hand, and received an electric shock, causing the injuries complained of.

[11]*11The second count of the plaintiff’s declaration alleges the negligence of a superintendent, and, in the specifications after-wards filed by him, the plaintiff describes Pulían as such superintendent. The case was submitted to the jury upon the second count of the declaration as amended, and upon the specifications. The second count as amended alleges that the plaintiff’s injuries were caused by the negligence of an acting superintendent of the defendant under the second part of cl. 2, § 127, c. 514, of St. 1909.

1. The defendant contends that as Pulían is described in the specifications as a superintendent, and that instead of being absent he is alleged to have been present, the requirement of the statute is not sustained and therefore the plaintiff cannot recover under the second count as amended.

While the specification referred to was applicable to the second count as originally drawn, because the negligence there charged was that of a superintendent, yet when this cause of action was abandoned, and a new ground of liability was set forth by amendment allowed at the conclusion of the evidence, which amendment undoubtedly was filed to meet the evidence in the case as finally presented, this specification became wholly inapplicable to the second count as amended. The defendant’s exception to the refusal of the court to give its fourth request therefore cannot be sustained.

2. The defendant contends that the plaintiff was not in the exercise of due care; that he knew, or in the exercise of reasonable care ought to have known, that the high tension wire with which he attempted to make the connection was then in use and charged with a high current of electricity. It also contends that the plaintiff’s injuries were due to the manner in which he undertook to make the connection, and that the method adopted by him was careless and contrary to instructions which he previously had received.

Upon these questions the evidence was conflicting. Its weight is not for this court to determine. It could have been found that while the plaintiff knew that the high tension wire had been used for localizing tests the week before the accident, he did not know that it was so used at the time of the accident. He testified that before the accident occurred he did not know that it was in use for that purpose at any time during the day he was hurt.

[12]*12While the defendant offered evidence to show that the safe and proper method of making the connections for the test was first to connect the bare end of the insulated wire attached to the lead with the wires in the cable, and then to place the hook upon the overhead wire; that the plaintiff had been instructed to make the connection in this way, and that if he had adopted this method he would not have been injured even if the overhead wire was charged with electricity, still it was for the jury to say whether these contentions were made out by the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
219 Mass. 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hargrave-v-american-steel-wire-co-of-new-jersey-mass-1914.