Milne v. Providence Telephone Company

72 A. 716, 29 R.I. 504, 1909 R.I. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 10, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 72 A. 716 (Milne v. Providence Telephone Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milne v. Providence Telephone Company, 72 A. 716, 29 R.I. 504, 1909 R.I. LEXIS 51 (R.I. 1909).

Opinion

Blodgett, J.

Robert Milne,' the plaintiff's intestate, was, on the 29th of July, 1907, the-date of the accident, in the employ' of the Pawtucket Electric Company as the assistant foreman of a gang of linemen. This company was engaged in furnishing electricity for light and power. On the date mentioned, Milne, with other employees of the company, went to the corner of *505 Weeden and Conant streets, in' Pawtucket, to hunt for some trouble on the system, called by linemen a "live ground.” Upon arriving at the corner aforesaid, Milne and another employee, named Foss, went up a pole there. This pole, together with other poles on the same street, belonged to the Providence Telephone Company, the defendant. Both the electric company and the city of Pawtucket had been permitted to place wires upon these poles, but it does not appear that the defendant received any compensation from either of the parties mentioned. So far as appears, these wires were placed upon the poles of the defendant by its permission, and simply as a matter of convenience to the other company and the city of Pawtucket.

Upon the pole at the corner of Weeden and Conant streets the defendant had a cable-box, from which ran a cable. The cable was attached to and extended down the pole. From this •same cable-box ran a ground wire which ran down the, street ••side of the pole to the ground, and was held in place upon the pole by a series óf small staples. Both the cable and the ground wire, before mentioned, were in plain sight of any one who might choose to look for or observe them, and both had been there for some years.

The pole near the top was provided with several cross-arms for the accommodation of the different wires, and the wires of the telephone company were above those of the electric •company. '

After Milne and Foss had reached a convenient position for that purpose, they cut the high voltage wire belonging to the Pawtucket Electric Company, and after some other employees farther down the line had made some necessary changes or adjustments, which occupied something like three-quarters of an hour, they were notified to again connect up and tape the wire. After the connection had been completed, Milne proceeded to tape the wire, that is, to wind with tape the ends which had previously been stripped of insulation in order to make the connection. While doing this taping, Milne received a shock of electricity which immediately resulted in his death.

*506 The uncontradicted testimony is that Milne was burned upon the right thumb and the right foot, and that he must have therefore come in contact with the high-voltage wire, and some ground wire at the same time, which caused the current to pass through his body. The testimony also .shows that he probably came in contact with the ground wire and thus brought about the passage of, the current through his body while he was working upon the high-voltage wire. There is also undisputed testimony that Milne was a lineman of experience; that there were two things which every lineman must look out for and avoid, one being a short circuit and the other a ground, and that Milne probably grounded himself by getting his foot in contact with the ground wire, running down the side of the pole, while his hands were in contact with the high-voltage wire which he was engaged in taping.

The case came on for trial October 15, 1908, before Mr. Justice Stearns and a jury, and at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony the-court, on motion, directed the jury to find a verdict for the defendant.

The plaintiff has now filed her bill of exceptions to the ruling or decision of the Superior Court, alleging errors in the admission and rejection of certain testimony,.and in the direction of a verdict for the defendant.

(2) The first exception taken by the plaintiff is to the refusal of the court to permit the plaintiff to ask the following question (p. 70): “Q. 205. (By Mr. Hogan) Did your linemen • assume that the Providence Telephone Company would keep its equipment on the poles you used in common in reasonably safe condition? Mr. Vincent: He cannot testify as to what somebody else assumed.”

The exception must be overruled upon the ground urged by the counsel for the defendant. Further, it affirmatively appears by the testimony of the plaintiff’s same witness Smith, who was at the time of the accident the general manager of the Pawtucket Electric Company, that it was the duty of its inspector to inspect the equipment of the Providence Telephone Company as well as the equipment of the Pawtucket Electric Company, as shown by his testimony on page 72 of the record, *507 as follows: “Q. 211. (By Mr. Hogan) Was it a part of his duty to inspect the Providence Telephone Company equipment as well as your own equipment? Ans. I think it is; I think it was.”

(3) The second exception is to a refusal to permit an answer by the witness Foss, an employee of the Pawtucket Electric Company, who was working with Milne on the pole in question at the time of the accident, to the following question (p. 139) r “Q. 380. (By Mr. Hogan) What, if any, notice did Milne-have, to your knowledge, that this wire was there uninsulated and that it was there grounded in the ground?”

It was said by this court in Judge v. Narragansett Electric Lighting Company, 21 R. I. p. 128: “As an experienced lineman and trouble hunter, he must have been aware of the dangerous nature of the work which he was called upon to perform, and must have known that if he permitted himself to come-in contact with a grounded wire while handling or in contact with a heavily charged wire, like those of the defendant, or created a short circuit whereby the current from these wires was passed through his body, serious injury, if not death, was; reasonably certain. In these circumstances he was bound to the exercise of a very high, if not the highest, degree of care, or, in other words, to a degree of care commensurate with the dangers to which he was exposed. The deep burn upon the hand, and the evidence furnished by the autopsy that he had received a severe electric shock, with the certainty that these-could have resulted only from his becoming grounded while-in contact with a heavily charged wire, or from his creating a, short circuit for the current through his body, raise an inference that he was not exercising the high degree of care-required in such a dangerous employment. In the absence of' evidence to rebut such an inference, and the burden of proof of due care being on the plaintiff, we do not think that the-jury were warranted in finding that the deceased was not guilty of contributory negligence.”

The testimony here affirmatively and by the plaintiff’s-witness shows that the deceased was a “trouble hunter,”' looking for a “live ground,” and the record further shows as; *508 follows, by the testimony of plaintiff’s witness, Smith (p. 69): '“•C. Q. 195. (By Mr. Vincent) What sort of work was it, Mr. Smith, that this man was doing as to its being dangerous? A. He was looking up the ground on the system. C. Q. 196. Is that supposed to be a very dangerous part of the work? A. It is. C. Q. 197.

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Bluebook (online)
72 A. 716, 29 R.I. 504, 1909 R.I. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milne-v-providence-telephone-company-ri-1909.