LaBounty v. Defiance Gas & Electric Co.

153 N.E. 88, 21 Ohio App. 154, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 447, 1925 Ohio App. LEXIS 217
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 18, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 153 N.E. 88 (LaBounty v. Defiance Gas & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LaBounty v. Defiance Gas & Electric Co., 153 N.E. 88, 21 Ohio App. 154, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 447, 1925 Ohio App. LEXIS 217 (Ohio Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

*155 Williams, J.

Plaintiff bronglit Ms action to recover for tbe death of his decedent, Roxie E. Schulz, who was Mlled by electricity on the real property of the defendant George R. Ford. The cause was tried to a jury, and at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence the court directed a verdict for the defendants. After overruling a motion for new trial, the court entered judgment for the defendants on the verdict for costs. Thereupon the plaintiff below instituted this proceeding in error and asks a reversal of the judgment.

On the property of the . defendant George R. Ford was a pole of the Defiance Gas & Electric Company, which carried the high tension wires and other electric wires of that company, and from one to two feet beneath them were the telephone wires of the defendant in error George R. Ford.

On the occasion in question, the defendant George R. Ford had contracted with John J. Duck to make repairs upon his telephone system. John J. Duck sent certain of his employes, among them the decedent, to perform labor in connection therewith, and in the course of the work the decedent ascended the pole referred to in order to make an examination of certain wires or apparatus within a certain can containing telephone wire connections, which was located near the top of the pole and about a foot and a half underneath one of the Mgh tension wires. To open the can it was necessary to lift the can top, and, while engaged in that operation, the decedent fell to the ground apparently killed by a current of electricity. ' The inference may be drawn from the evidence that he stood astride or against a guy wire attached *156 to the pole to the left of the can, and that when he lifted the can top it touched the high tension wire, sending a current of electricity through his body, and causing his death. Investigation made after he was killed showed that the strain- insulator on the guy wire was defective.

Was there evidence tending to show the defendants were guilty of negligence? Upon this question we think that the case of Cincinnati Gas & Electric Co. v. Archdeacon, Adm'r., 80 Ohio St., 27, 88 N. E., 125, is applicable. We quote from the first paragraph of the syllabus as follows:

“When two companies engaged in enterprises calling for the use of wires to carry electricity, arrange for the joint use of a pole to sustain them, each company is, with respect to such use, charged with the same duty toward employes of the other as to its own; and the correlative duty of the employes to exercise due care for their own safety is the same as to both companies.”

The pole in question was erected upon the land of defendant George R. Ford by Tryon Bros., who constructed the electric light line attached to the pole and later sold and transferred their interest therein to the defendant Defiance Gas & Electric Company. There is a conflict in the evidence as to whether the telephone wires or electric light wires were first placed upon the pole, but there is evidence tending to show that both the telephone and the electric light wires were placed thereon as a part of the same transaction, the defendant Ford giving the use of the land, apparently without compensation, and Tryon Bros, furnishing and erecting the pole. Steps were placed thereon, *157 which, were used generally for many years by those engaged in repairing both the electric light and telephone wires attached to the pole. There is therefore evidence tending to show a joint use of the pole by the two defendants, which would charge each with the same duty toward employes of the other as it owed to its own. We do not understand that it is claimed by any of the parties that the decedent was an employe of either of the defendants. We think, however, it would follow that there was a duty on the part of the joint users of the pole to use ordinary care toward those who might use the pole for the purpose of making repairs, whether as employe of either of the defendants or as employe of an independent contractor hired by either of the defendants.

It is claimed on behalf of the defendant George B. Ford that the doctrine of assumption of risk applies, and that it appears from the evidence as a matter of law that the decedent assumed the risk and cannot recover. While it is probably true that the doctrine of assumption of risk does not apply as between an employe of an independent contractor and the owner of the property who contracts with him for repairs, yet, if it does apply, we do not think that it can be held as a matter of law that the decedent assumed the risk of any injury growing out of a defect in a strain insulator on the guy wire, for the reason that such defect was not obvious; nor is there any evidence that the defect was known to the decedent or appreciated by him.

In the petition and amendment thereto the plaintiff claims that the defendants were guilty of negligence in three respects, as follows:

*158 “(1) In not having their electric light wires equipped with proper insulation.
“(2) In maintaining telephone wire, can top, and other equipment connected with the telephone wires, at a distance of about 18 inches from the high tension’ wires, when the distance should not have been less than 6 feet for safety and protection of men required to work on said telephone wires.
“(3) In failing to have the guy wires attached to said pole insulated.”

While as to the first two claimed grounds of negligence the dangers connected therewith were open, apparent, and obvious to an expert lineman, yet, as to the third ground, the evidence tends to show that the defect of the strain insulator was not open, obvious, and apparent, and decedent may well have assumed that the strain insulator was in good repair, and, as there is evidence tending to show that he could not have sustained his injury if the strain insulator had not been defective, questions of negligence, proximate cause and contributory negligence were mixed questions of law and fact for the determination of a jury under proper instructions of the court.

It might seem, at first blush, that these views are in conflict with those expressed in the ease of Gas Co. v. Archdeacon, supra, in so far as the application of the principle of contributory negligence to this case is concerned. We believe, however, that there are certain marked distinctions between the facts in that case and the case at bar. Archdeacon, an experienced lineman, was employed by the telephone company as such. The telephone company had permitted “the electric light company *159

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Scott v. Pacific Power & Light Co.
35 P.2d 749 (Washington Supreme Court, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 N.E. 88, 21 Ohio App. 154, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 447, 1925 Ohio App. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/labounty-v-defiance-gas-electric-co-ohioctapp-1925.