Helgesen v. Chicago Suburban Water & Light Co.

156 Ill. App. 541, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 452
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 15, 1910
DocketGen. No. 15,029
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 156 Ill. App. 541 (Helgesen v. Chicago Suburban Water & Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helgesen v. Chicago Suburban Water & Light Co., 156 Ill. App. 541, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 452 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Chytraus

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a personal injury suit wherein plaintiff claims that he was injured by reason of negligence attributable to defendant, while in defendant’s employ as an electrical lineman. Plaintiff sustained the injury, of which he complains, through becoming the connection between the two disconnected ends of a wire carrying 1,100 volts of electricity, while he was at work upon the cross-arm of an electric wire pole. He recovered a judgment for $3,500 in a jury trial and from that judgment defendant prosecutes this appeal.

The declaration contains an original count, which was filed August 23, 1906, and three additional counts which were filed January 31, 1908.

The original count sets up that hy order and direction of the defendant plaintiff ascended a certain pole to “string and transfer” a certain wire provided by the defendant and Jhat the wire was heavily charged with electricity and was “exposed at parts and improperly, inadequately, insufficiently and unsafely insulated,” which facts were not known to the plaintiff but which defendant did know or by the exercise of ordinary care should have known; that the defendant did not “warn and instruct” plaintiff of the dangerous condition of the wire and, that, while upon the pole and in the exercise of proper care, plaintiff, by reason of the premises, came in contact with the wire, and received an electric shock whereby he was injured. In the evidence it appears, and it was admitted at the trial, that, when plaintiff ascended the pole, he was fully aware of the fact that the wire from which he received the shock was charged with electricity. It is also clear from the evidence that plaintiff observed and was aware of the condition of the wire and of the insulation thereof before receiving any shock and that, as to the insulation and physical condition of the wire, he had a better and earlier opportunity of observation than anyone else. Plaintiff failed totally in proving the cause of action set up in this count.

The first additional count sets up that, by order and direction of the defendant, plaintiff ascended a pole to “string and transfer” a wire, provided by defendant, from that pole to another, with averments similar to those in the original count as to the wire being charged and exposed and not properly insulated and as to the lack of knowledge on the part of plaintiff and defendant’s knowledge or charge-ability with knowledge. This» count also sets up that, while plaintiff was upon the pole exercisiúg due care, defendant “failed to furnish plaintiff a safe place to do said work}” and that by the conduct of defendant in that behalf “plaintiff unavoidably came in contact with certain of said wires and as an immediate consequence” sustained an electric shock and was thereby injured. Ho element of unsafety in the place provided is set up except the condition of the wire and, if this count states a cause of action, which we need not now determine, plaintiff failed in establishing the .cause of action set up for the same reason that he failed in respect to the original count.

The second additional count sets up that plaintiff was in the employ of defendant and that defendant ordered and directed him to ascend a certain pole and to transfer and string a certain wire attached to that pole upon another pole, with averments similar to those in the original count as to the wire being charged and exposed and not properly insulated and as to the lack of knowledge on the part of plaintiff and defendant’s knowledge or chargeability with knowledge. It also sets up that, while plaintiff was exercising ordinary care for his own safety and was in the act of stringing and transferring the aforesaid wire, a vice principal of defendant, who was upon another pole and who was assisting in and superintending plaintiff’s work, “caused plaintiff, while holding and working with said dangerous and uninsulated wire, * * to come in contact with another wire, which act * * completed an electrical circuit through plaintiff’s body,” whereby plaintiff sustained an electric shock and was thereby injured.

It is conceivable that plaintiff may have been “caused” “to come in contact with another wire” by a vice-principal of defendant, as set up in this count, without any negligence whatever on the part of anyone or without there being any negligence attributable to defendant in that cdnnection, and we are not prepared to say that this count presents a state of facts showing that the injury to plaintiff was caused by negligence attributable to the defendant, so as to make the count sufficient against a demurrer, yet, at this stage of the case, after verdict, this count may be regarded as defectively stating a good cause of action and, therefore, as sufficient when aided by the legal inferences and intendments which follow a verdict. We will so regard it.

Plaintiff’s evidence tends to prove a state of facts creating a cause of action under this second additional count, when regarded as last stated. The defendant’s evidence tends to prove an entirely different state of facts and one that is totally inconsistent with any right of recovery by the plaintiff. Plaintiff’s evidence is not so full and clear in detail and circumstance as to satisfactorily establish negligence in the acts charged under the second count and to preclude the idea of contributory negligence on plaintiff’s part. However, as the crucial details and circumstances may be more fully developed upon another trial and the case may then have a different aspect, we prefer not to place our disposal thereof upon a lack of evidence on the part of the plaintiff. There is another ground upon which we are obliged to reverse the judgment in this case.

According to the evidence, Heinze, defendant’s foreman of the construction crew engaged in the work, was in a position to see and observe more clearly and fully than anyone else what happened when plaintiff was injured. Heinze was defendant’s principal witness in the trial. It was of vital importance to the due administration of justice in this case and to the accordance of a fair trial to the defendant that nothing should occur in the proceedings which would have a tendency to erroneously and unjustly discredit Heinze. Under these circumstances, any occurrence of that character in the procedure during the trial, occasioned by the conduct of plaintiff’s attorney, would, of course, vitiate the verdict subsequently returned, if in favor of the plaintiff. Plaintiff’s attorney undertook to impeach Heinze’s testimony and credibility by evidence of a previous unsworn contrary statement made by him out of court. -In the admission of this previous statement, under the circumstances under which it was admitted, plaintiff’s attorney led the court into reversible error. The previous statement, by which it was sought to impeach, was typewritten. It was essential to its admissibility that it be genuine and that it be in the sanie condition when offered in evidence as when Heinze made it. Had it been corrupted while in the possession of plaintiff or his attorneys, it was inadmissible when offered on plaintiff’s behalf.

During cross-examination of Heinze, on March 12, 1908, plaintiff’s attorney, Waters, first brought up the subject of the typewritten statement.

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Bluebook (online)
156 Ill. App. 541, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helgesen-v-chicago-suburban-water-light-co-illappct-1910.