Lancaster Electric Light Co. v. Taylor

181 S.W. 967, 168 Ky. 179, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 518
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 28, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 181 S.W. 967 (Lancaster Electric Light Co. v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lancaster Electric Light Co. v. Taylor, 181 S.W. 967, 168 Ky. 179, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 518 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

[180]*180Opinion op the Couet by

Judge Tuenee

— Reversing.

There is in the city of Lancaster a lot adjoining or near the public school which was rented in 1914 and prior thereto by the school authorities as a playground for the students. The owner, however, reserved the right to rent the same for street fairs, tent shows and other such amusements.

In the early summer of 1914 the owner rented the lot to a street fair company, and at the request of the management appellant’s electric wires were run on the lot so that the street fair people might have the benefit of the electric lights in their exhibitions. The wires and poles remained on the lot after the street fair and were probably used thereafter by some other amusement company which exhibited there.

During the week ending July 18, 1914, the Williams Comedy Company rented the lot and gave nightly exhibitions under a tent erected thereon - by the company, but used their own lights and did not use the electric lights, although the electric wires still remained thereon.

Appellee was an actor in the Williams Comedy Company, and on Saturday night, July 18, after the performance the tent was being dismantled and the paraphernalia loaded on wagons to be hauled to the station for shipment to another point. Appellee’s written contract of employment with the company did not impose upon him any duty with reference to the loading of the company’s effects upon removal from one place to another, although he testifies that it was expected of him and that he sometimes did so.

Some time after the performance on the night in question, although appellee had not finished packing his personal effects and belongings, he and another employe of the company walked down from the lot to a restaurant in the town and had a lunch, and when they left there was standing in the tent a wagon with horses to it to be loaded with some of the belongings of the company to be hauled to the station for shipment. When they returned a short time later the wagon had been loaded and driven out of the tent and had proceeded a short way on its road to the station, but still in the lot, when some of the benches belonging to the company which had been piled up high on the wagon came in contact with the electric wires which had been so run on the lot, and the wagon was halted.' Appellee and his companion [181]*181immediately went up to where the wagon was, and he, without inquiry from anyone, or suggestion from anybody, and without knowing what the difficulty was or the cause of the trouble, as he states, except that the load had come in contact with something, immediately jumped upon the wagon and came in contact with the wires, was thrown from the wagon and his leg broken.

A local liveryman had the contract with the company to haul the goods from the lot to the railroad station and the wagon was at the time of the accident being driven by his employe.

This is an action by Taylor against appellant to recover for the injury so received, the negligence alleged being that the wires were strung too near to the ground for safety and that they were not properly insulated.

The answer denied the material averments of the petition, and in a separate paragraph pleaded contributory negligence.

On the trial appellee recovered a verdict and judgment for $2,000.00, and from that this appeal is prosecuted.

The appellant insists that it was entitled to a peremp-' tory instruction.

(1) Because the plaintiff was a trespasser or volunteer on the wagon at the time of the accident.

(2) Because the evidence showed the wires in which he came in contact were not dangerous.

(3) Because it stood admitted in the pleadings that appellee was guilty of contributory negligence.

That appellee was not a trespasser on the ground is too apparent for discussion; the company of which he was a member had the lot rented, and he being one of its employes not only had the unquestioned right to be there, but from the evidence it is quite apparent it was his duty to be there.

"Whether he was a mere volunteer or trespasser when he climbed upon the wagon presents, however, a different question. There was a conflict in the evidence as to whether it was any part of the plaintiff’s duty, under his contract of employment, to aid in the loading of the paraphernalia of the company upon its removal from one point to another. His written contract of employment imposes no such duty upon him, but his own evidence and that of another connected with the comedy company, shows that he was-expected-to. give such aid [182]*182when the company was so- moving. This question was submitted to the jury in the instructions given by the court, and they were required to believe before they could find a verdict for the plaintiff that he was at the time of the accident engaged in the line of his duty.

The court likewise submitted to the jury the question of fact whether the electric-wires, charged as they were, were at the time dangerous. The evidence on this point was that the wires were only charged with a voltage of from 210 to 220, and that such voltage would not produce the death óf a man under ordinary conditions. On the other hand it was shown conclusively that the shock caused by the plaintiff’s contact with the wires knocked him from the wagon and directly brought about his injury, and although it may be that electric wires only charged with such voltage were not deadly, it is apparent from the physical facts in this case that they are certainly dangerous. While such a charge of electricity might not cause death it-is easy to see how it might bring about serious injury. It might cause such a shock as to wreck ones whole nervous system, or it might throw or hurl him against some object which would result in maiming or injuring him for life. Manifestly such a charge of .electricity is dangerous'.

After the - verdict the defendant entered a motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and is now insisting that that, should have been sustained because the affirmative plea of contributory negligence in the answer was uncontroverted.

Section 386 of the Civil Code provides:

“Judgment shall be given for the party whom the pleadings entitle thereto, though there may have been a verdict against him,” and-it is the contention of appellant that inasmuch as its affirmative plea of contributory negligence stood confessed, the court should have sustained--both the request for a directed verdict and the motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

Appellee, however,- argues that as evidence was taken 'by both parties on this issue,-and it was treated throughout the trial as one of- the issues,- and- as the court instructed upon'it, and as the defendant-requested the giving of-ail instruction on thife subject, that the verdict should be treated-as having-cured-this-defect. •

But such is not- the -rule; it is- -true that when- an-issue •is attempted to be -made by the pleadings; but by reason [183]

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.W. 967, 168 Ky. 179, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lancaster-electric-light-co-v-taylor-kyctapp-1916.