Litsch v. Kansas Gas & Electric Co.

148 P. 632, 95 Kan. 496, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 244
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 8, 1915
DocketNo. 19,490
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 148 P. 632 (Litsch v. Kansas Gas & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Litsch v. Kansas Gas & Electric Co., 148 P. 632, 95 Kan. 496, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 244 (kan 1915).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

West, J.:

The plaintiff recovered a judgment for $15,000 against The Kansas Gas &■ Electric Company and The Petroleum Products Company for damages alleged to have been caused by a shock-from wires negligently left by the defendants in a dangerous condition. Both defendants appeal. The charge in substance was .that the products company owned and operated an oil [498]*498refinery in Independence, and employed electricity both for power and for light, purchasing the same from the electric company from its plant in the city of Independence, which electricity was conveyed to the premises and buildings of the products company by means of poles and wires and appliances owned, controlled and maintained by the electric company; that the plaintiff was employed by the products company as a carpenter and laborer upon a building in process of construction known as the bone-burner building; that the products company ordered and directed the electric company to string its wires over the roof of such building, which was done in a careless and negligent manner, and such wires were allowed to remain in such position as was dangerous to persons and to plaintiff at such times as they might be required to go upon the roof ■of such building to work; that the products company carelessly and negligently failed and omitted to make or cause to be made proper inspection of the wires, wrappings and appliances so erected upon and above the roof of such building, which inspection would have prevented the injury complained of, and negligently omitted to warn the plaintiff of the defective and unsafe condition of such wires; that the electric company carelessly and negligently permitted its wires to be so dangerously and defectively constructed and to remain so; that such wires were charged with and carried a high and dangerous current of electricity unknown to the plaintiff; that being directed to go upon the roof of the bone-burner building to put in place a certain galvanized-iron smokestack, the plaintiff and his helper went upon the roof of such building, which was a two-story building with sides and roof of corrugated iron, the distance from the ground to the eaves being twenty-six and one-half feet and from the eaves to the comb of the roof about fifteen feet; that three of the electric wires in question had been strung about three feet above the comb of the roof; that the plaintiff was upon [499]*499the comb of the roof attempting to place the smokestack in position, when it came in contact- with the electric wire or wires which had been allowed to become in a dangerous and unsafe condition in that the insulation’ at or .near their point of connection was faulty and unfit for the purposes of insulation. The wires carried a dangerous electric curent, not having been properly wrapped, so that the wrappings had spread and become unwrapped,.thus leaving the wires so that when the smokestack came in contact therewith the electric current passed into and through the plaintiff’s body, from which he received a shock rendering him unconscious, causing him to fall to the ground below, by which he received grave and serious permanent injuries. The answers consisted of general denials and pleas of contributory negligence and assumption of risk..

The first three errors assigned are overruling motions for judgment on the opening statement and pleadings, overruling objections to evidence under the petition, and overruling demurrers to the plaintiff’s evidence. It is argued that as the plaintiff was at work upon the building as it progressed it was not the duty of the builder to provide him a reasonably safe place to work in the ordinary acceptance of that term; that the plaintiff must have known of the dangerous nature of the electric wires placed where those in controversy were, and that under the circumstances he assumed the risk. It is urged that by stringing the wires two feet above the comb of the roof all fault was eliminated as no one would suppose an injury could occur there. But the building was in process of construction, and it was manifestly necessary for workmen to be in proximity to these wires until the completion of the building including the placing of the smokestack, and this condition of things carried its corresponding need for care in locating, insulating and inspecting the wires, charged as they were with so heavy a voltage of electricity. Counsel suggest that the dangers of the plaintiff’s em[500]*500ployment were open and obvious and should have been avoided rather than disregarded by him. His own testimony was to the effect that he had no knowledge or warning of the high voltage or condition of the wires.

“I did n’t know anything about the wire carrying high voltage of electricity or that it might give a person a shock if he touched it. . . . When I was working there I supposed it would be safe when they were put up there. ... Mr. Shermer did not at any time say anything to me about the wires carrying-current. Never warned me to be careful at no time or place. No employee of the electric company ever said anything about the wires carrying a current and never warned me about it. Never heard it discussed by anybody.”

There was evidence of several witnesses that warnings were given, but it was for the jury to glean the truth from the entire testimony produced and it appears that they gave credence to plaintiff’s version of this matter, that neither of the defendants gave any warning of danger in coming in contact with the wires above the building. It follows that the assignments of error thus far considered are without merit, and it may be observed that some of these alleged rulings do not appear from the abstract to have been made.

The electric company complains of the refusal of an instruction requested by it that those who have notice of the dangerous condition of a wire or other electric appliances and voluntarily bring themselves in contact with it can not hold the electric company for resulting-injuries. Another requested by the same defendant was in substance that if the plaintiff knew of the high voltage of the wires and the consequent danger and could have avoided such danger by attempting to place the smokestack by means of a ladder or by scaffolding on the north side of the building he was precluded from recovery against the electric company. Still another to the effect that if after being warned of the high voltage and danger of the wires the plaintiff, being foreman or [501]*501in charge of the building, attempted to cross the comb, instead of attempting to place the smokestack by a course which would not have brought him in thé vicinity of the wires, he could not recover as against the electric company, was refused, which refusal is assigned as error. The findings of the jury were that the plaintiff did not have charge of the construction of the building and that he was not warned. There was no evidence that the smokestack could have been put in place without bringing the plaintiff in the vicinity of the wires. The only testimony directly on this point was that of Mr. Murrow who stated that the pipe hole was five feet from the eaves of the roof, and that there was nothing in the construction of the roof to prevent a scaffold being erected there, and nothing to prevent any one placing a pipe from using that side of the roof. This, however, does not show that in attempting to place the pipe by mounting that side of the roof the pipe might not have come in contact with the wires as it did, or in some similar way causing a similar injury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 P. 632, 95 Kan. 496, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/litsch-v-kansas-gas-electric-co-kan-1915.