Mann v. Northeast Kansas Telephone Co.

111 P. 181, 83 Kan. 266, 1910 Kan. LEXIS 520
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedOctober 8, 1910
DocketNo. 16,664
StatusPublished

This text of 111 P. 181 (Mann v. Northeast Kansas Telephone 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
Mann v. Northeast Kansas Telephone Co., 111 P. 181, 83 Kan. 266, 1910 Kan. LEXIS 520 (kan 1910).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This is an action to recover damages for a personal injury. The defendant is a telephone company whose telephone line occupied a part of the public highway. It had an employee whose duty consisted of traveling along the line with a team of horses and keeping the line in repair. This employee, upon the occasion of the alleged injury, tied his team to one of the telephone poles and climbed up to inspect the wire. The team broke loose and ran away, running into and injuring the plaintiff, who was traveling upon the highway in a buggy drawn by one horse. Upon a trial in the district court the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $500, in which amount judgment was entered against the defendant, and it appeals.

It is alleged that the defendant was negligent and careless in allowing its team. to stand in the public highway without being securely fastened. Upon the trial the jury returned seventy-one special findings of fact with the general verdict, as follow:

“(1) Ques. How long .had defendant been the owner of the team of horses in question at the time of the accident to the plaintiff of October 3, 1908? Ans. On or about two years.
“(2) Q. How long had Jesse Schilling been in the employment of the defendant previous to the third day of October, 1908? A. Four years.
“(4) Q. Did Jesse Schilling exercise the care usually exercised by an ordinarily prudent man in the discharging of his duties while acting as a servant of the defendant on the third day of October, 1908? A. No.
“(5) Q. Do you find from the evidence that the team of horses owned by the defendant were by the said Jesse Schilling tied or hitched at the point where [268]*268he left them while he climbed the pole to repair the-line? A. Yes.
“ (6) Q. In tying said team (if he did tie them) did Jesse Schilling exercise that degree of care ordinarily exercised by a reasonably prudent man in the discharge of his duties and under the circumstances and surioundings as they existed? A. No.
“(7) Q. Do you find that the defendant’s servant, Jesse Schilling, was guilty of negligence in the tying of the team of the defendant? A. Yes.
“(8) Q. If you answer the last preceding question in the affirmative, please state what his negligence consisted of. A. The opinion prevails that the horse became untied and it would have been better if both had been tied, knowing that the team was a runaway team.
“(11) Q. Could the plaintiff by the exercise and use of his eyes and ears have seen the team of the defendant approaching him from the rear, had he been looking and listening, in time to have avoided the accident? A. No.
“(12) Q. Did the plaintiff take any steps of precaution to avoid the accident?. A. No.
“ (13) Q. Could the plaintiff by the exercise of reasonable care have discovered the team approaching him in time to have avoided the accident or collision? A. No.
“(14) Q. Could the plaintiff in the exercise of reasonable care and caution have heard the defendant’s team approaching him from the rear in time to have avoided being run down by it? A. No; not being in the habit of being run down by a team, he was not looking for it.
“(15) Q. What steps, if any, did the plaintiff take or what did he do, if anything, to avoid being run down by the defendant’s team ? A. None.
“(17) Q. What, if anything, was there to prevent the plaintiff in the exercise of reasonable care from hearing the defendant’s team approaching him from the rear? A. The hard condition of the road and the rattle of his own buggy and the possible noise of the water wagon.
“(18) Q. What, if anything, was there to prevent the plaintiff in the exercise of reasonable care from seeing the defendant’s team approaching him? A.. [269]*269The buggy top being raised and the curtain down and the direction that he was going.
“(19) Q. Could the plaintiff by the use of his faculties and the exercise of reasonable care have heard the defendant’s team approaching him from the rear? A. No.
“(20) Q. Could the plaintiff in the exercise of his faculties and reasonable care have seen the defendant’s team approaching him from the rear? A. Yes, if he had been looking backward.
“(21) Q. How far from where the accident oecurred is it to the point where the defendant’s team came in sight of the plaintiff? A. Eighty or ninety feet.
“ (23) Q. Could not the plaintiff in the exercise of reasonable care have heard the defendant’s team as it came downhill and approached him? A. No.
“ (28) Q. Could the plaintiff have seen or heard the defendant’s team approaching him had he exercised ordinary care and prudence? A. It was possible for him to have seen it, but not of heard it.
“(29) Q. If you answer the last preceding question in the negative, state what it was that prevented plaintiff from hearing or seeing defendant’s team approaching him. A. There was nothing to prevent him from seeing had he been looking backward; the noise prevented him from hearing.
“ (30) Q. What was the condition of the top of the plaintiff’s buggy with reference to being raised or lowered at the time of the accident? A. The top was raised.
“(31) Q. If you find that the top of the plaintiff’s buggy was raised at the time of the accident, how was it with reference to the rear curtain being up or down ? A. It was down.
“(34) Q. Were the harness, lines and hitch reins used by defendant on its said team of horses in ordinary safe condition ? A. Yes.
“(35) Q. Did Jesse Schilling, the servant of the defendant, hitch said team of horses at the point where he stopped to repair defendant’s line? A. Yes.
“•(37) Q. State, if you can, what caused the defendant’s team to break its fastenings and run away? A. We do not know.
“(38) Q. Is it not a fact that under all of the cir[270]*270cumstances and surroundings of this case that the plaintiff was injured by an accident that was practically unavoidable? A. No."
“(39) Q. If you find that the defendant was negligent in any way, state in what the negligence consisted. A. Not tying the team properly.
“ (40) Q. If you find for the plaintiff, what amount do you allow him for medical attention? A. $4. (Four dollars.)
“(41) Q. If you find for the plaintiff, what amount do you allow him for medicine? A. Nothing.
“(42) Q. If you find for the plaintiff, what do you allow him for damages to his buggy? A. $35. (Thirty-five dollars.)
“(42-3-) Q- What amount (if anything) do you allow plaintiff for his pain, suffering and mental anguish? A. $461. (Four hundred and sixty-one dollars.)
“(43) Q. How long had Jesse Schilling been using the defendant’s team previous to the accident on October 3, 1908 ? A. Two months.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 P. 181, 83 Kan. 266, 1910 Kan. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mann-v-northeast-kansas-telephone-co-kan-1910.