Maryland Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Cloman

55 A. 681, 97 Md. 620, 1903 Md. LEXIS 189
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 55 A. 681 (Maryland Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Cloman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Cloman, 55 A. 681, 97 Md. 620, 1903 Md. LEXIS 189 (Md. 1903).

Opinion

Boyd, ).,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee sued the appellant for injuries sustained by him while engaged in stringing wires on the telephone poles of the company, and recovered a judgment for three thous- and dollars damages. He had been employed in similar work for the Chesapeake and Potomac Company for about nine *622 months. At the time of the accident, he and another employee, named Uhler, were stretching ten wires on a cross-arm with what are called “jack straps,’’ there being five wires on each side of the pole. The cross-arm was made of wood and was about ten feet long, three and a quarter inches wide, and four inches thick. There were ten holes bored in it about a foot apart, and one and one-half inches in diameter, in which wooden pins were inserted to hold the insulators for the wires. The arm was fastened to the pole by a bolt, was supported by braces on either side of the pole, and was about thirty-five feet from the ground. At the time of the accident the appellee was sitting on the cross-arm with his feet resting on the lower arm, upon which wires had not been stretched. He was towards the outer end of the arm, and was working with the strap around the third pin when the arm broke, throwing him down and seriously injuring him. The appellee stated that he could not say exactly at what point the arm broke, but it was on the side he was sitting attd one of his witnesses said he thought it was at the fourth pin from the end and another that it was at the third or fourth.

The defendant offered no testimony. There are eighteen bills of exception in the record—seventeen of which present the rulings of the Court on the admissibility of testimony offered, and the last embraces the prayers. Two prayers were offered by the plaintiff, which were granted, and twenty were offered by the defendant, twelve of which were rejected, one conceded and the remaining seven granted. Under the view we take of the case it will not be necessary to consider all of the exceptions.

It cannot be doubted that a knot, which was discovered after the accident, in the cross-arm at a point where one of the holes was bored, was, at least to some extent, the cause of the accident, but the responsibility of the appellant must depend upon the further question whether it was negligent in furnishing the cross-arm with such defect in it. It must be admitted that there was no apparent defect in the arm, and it is well established by the testimony that the knot was not vis *623 ible by any ordinary inspection. The plaintiff testified that he did not notice anything about it that indicated it was not safe, and that it looked very similar to the creosote bars he had been accustomed to, while working for the Chesapeake and Potomac Company, which used creosote and red painted white pine arms. The former he said weighed from seventy-five to one hundred pounds, while the latter were much lighter. The arm that broke had been put on the pole the day before the plaintiff was injured, by some of the other employees. Pie said “The wires in question were thought to have been permanently deadened before he went up the pole, that they were fastened to the insulators, but it was found that they were not pulled hard enough, and he and Uhler went up to take up the remaining slack. They had to unfasten them and re-deaden them. The jack straps were used to take in slack which could not be taken in by hand pull.” When the wires are spoken of as being “deadened,” it is meant that they did not go beyond that pole, but were fastened to that arm.

In determining whether the appellant is responsible it will be well to first ascertain the character of the cross-arms furnished by it to its employees, the opportunities which its agents had to be assured that they were safe, what they actually did in that respect, and the use the appellee was making of this particular one at the time of the accident. Charles P'. Knox, who was “ gang foreman ” of the plaintiff and the other linemen engaged in the work, testified he was sent by the company to take charge of this construction work at Towson, that “ Pie went to the company and asked them what material he was to use in the w'ork, and was told to use the material then on the ground, the cross-arm which broke being one of those already in the work, on the pole.” Joseph S. Caskey said he was at the time of the accident “ head assistant to Mr. Holliday, the material boss,” who, the record shows, was reported sick the day before Caskey testified. The “ material boss ” had full charge of all materials and saw that the men received bolts, cross-arms, screw-drivers, wrenches and other things they needed. Caskey testified that *624 the cross-arm which broke came from their supplies—was sent from their High street yard. He examined it after the accident and said that the knot was not visible before the arm was broken—that the paint obscured it and in answer to the question whether the paint or creosote, whichever it was, was on when it came into the possession of the company, replied “ It was on it when it came into the possession of the company to the best of my knowledge.” The question being in substance repeated he said “ I saw the arms when they came in there. They were painted to the best of my knowledge.” He also said “ The holes came also in them when they were purchased.” Mr. Knox also testified “ that the knot referred to weakened the J4, inch strip by the pin, but said it was not the mistake of the man who bored the hole next to the knot, as all ten holes were bored at the same time by machinery, that the knot was not visible to the plaintiff when he went up on the arm, because it was painted, that it could have been seen on two sides if the paint had been removed, that knots in wood were an uncommon thing sometimes. He further testified that he never knew a cross-arm to break except when broken by storms.” In answer to the question how this arm compared in size and quality with the ordinary cross-arms that are used in the telephone business for the construction, of lines, he said In size I think it was about the regular size. I didn’t notice any difference in them, they were light in weight, very much like the regular old style red arm, about the same weight.” He also testified “ that the arms referred to were much lighter in weight than the creosote arm, but as to quality a good red arm would be as good as a .creosote arm, the arms in use by the defendant company being lighter than the creosote arms,” and “ that all cross-arms were bored similar to those used by the defendant company, though some had small iron pins in them, but such were not generally used.” , It is true that he said that this particular arm was not in his opinion safe for the purpose it was sent there, but- he explained that by saying that he thought it was not safe by reason of the knot being where the hole was bored, which *625 weakened it, and Caskey spoke of the wood as inferior— called it a “ culling ”—but he ascertained that from his examination of the arm after it was broken.

It must be remembered that all the testimony offered was produced by the plaintiff and that both Knox and Caskey were in positions to know the facts and, as we understand the record neither of them was in the employ of the defendant when they testified—they certainly showed no bias in favor of the company.

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Related

McVey v. Gerrald
192 A. 789 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1937)
State v. Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co.
160 A. 437 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1932)
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158 A. 19 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
55 A. 681, 97 Md. 620, 1903 Md. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-telephone-telegraph-co-v-cloman-md-1903.