New Omaha Thomson-Houston Electric Light Co. v. Johnson

93 N.W. 778, 67 Neb. 393, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 442
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1903
DocketNo. 12,557
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 93 N.W. 778 (New Omaha Thomson-Houston Electric Light Co. v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Omaha Thomson-Houston Electric Light Co. v. Johnson, 93 N.W. 778, 67 Neb. 393, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 442 (Neb. 1903).

Opinion

Hastings, C.

July 15,1900, Charles Johnson was killed by an electric shock obtained from a guy-wire attached to a pole maintained by the defendant company upon lot 2 in block 87 in the city of Omaha. This lot was uninclosed and unoccupied. There was no public alley through the block, but there was a pathway used by the public toAvards the west side, running from Dodge street north to Capitol avenue. It also appears that the vacant lot on which the pole was sending was sometimes used by teamsters in turning their wagons around, and a foot-path ran along its west side next to Burket’s undertaking establishment, and foot-passengers crossed the lot in various directions toward Capitol avenue. The company’s pole seems to have been about. 100 feet south of Capitol avenue, and twenty feet north from the south end of the lot. This south end of the lot was bounded by a board fence. Between this fence and the pole was a pile of galvanized roofing, consisting, as one ivitness said, of half a load. Another said it Aims a light load for an express Aragon. It is described as consisting of pieces eighteen inches square and smaller. The guy-AArire had formerly been attached to a stump or stake about fifty feet southwesterly from the pole, but had been for some Aveeks detached, and the loAver end coiled up and deposited in a box just south of the fence on top of which the Avire rested. It seems to have rubbed against a wire carrying a heavy electric current until it had Avom the insulation from the latter and had itself become charged with a poiverful current. Plaintiff claims that the company was bound to know and guard against such danger. The guy-wire, on the day of the accident, rested on this scrap- iron about fifteen feet south of the pole. It then passed along over such scrap iron, and up over the fence, and then doAvn into a coil in the wooden box directly south of the fence. It is alleged that the plaintiff’s intestate had no knowledge of electricity, and was unaware of any danger from contact with the Avire [395]*395or with tlie scrap iron, and that while Availring in the vicinity of the guy-Avire, without negligence on his part, he stopped on some of the scrap iron and received a shock because of Avliich he fell upon the pile of scrap iron and upon the Avire, Avith fatal result. He was thirty-five years old, strong, vigorous, industrious and economical, and earning $60 per month. The action was brought by his AA’idoAV on her oavu behalf and her young son’s. The company denied that she was the widow or adminis-tratrix of Charles Johnson; admitted its OAvnersliip of the electric plant; denied the rest of plaintiff’s allegations; and alleged that plaintiff’s intestate was guilty of contributory negligence, without Avliich his injury would not have1 been received. The reply denied such contributory negligence. The jury found for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,300. Motion for neAV trial avus overruled, and from that judgment the company brings error.

Fifty-three assignments of error are laid in the petition. The brief filed on behalf of the company, however, com-phrn* only of error in refusing a peremptory instruction for the defendant at the trial; error in refusing to re-fluiré plaintiff’s attorney, Avho testified at the trial, to state on cross-examination the amount of his contingent fee; and error in refusing instruction 11 tendered on defendant’s behalf, to the effect that if the jury should find that plaintiff’s intestate was under the influence of liquor, Avhieh caused him to neglect ordinary precautions, and by that reason he came in contact Avith the Avire and Avas killed, they should find for the defendant, even if they also found that the defendant had been negligent in regard to the guy-wire. The reasons Avhy the defendant claims it was error to refuse its request for a peremptory instruction are summarized in counsel’s brief as follows:

“1. The defendant, therefore, claims that because of the failure of the plaintiff to establish the allegation in his petition that he received his shock of electricity while walking in a pathway, by reason of his feet coming in contact Avith scrap iron, and for the further reason that [396]*396be was a mere licensee, to wliom the defendant owed no duty, the court should have sustained the motion of the defendant to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the defendant.
“2. That the testimony fails to show that the alleged negligence of the defendant was the cause of the deceased’s death.
“8. That the uncontradicted evidence of five witnesses, and the circumstances surrounding the whole transaction, show so clearly that the deceased came to his death owing to his own gross negligence and carelessness that no two reasonable minds could possibly differ in regard thereto, and the court should have given instruction No. 1 asked-by defendant. For the above reason this judgment should be reversed.”

The matters necessary to be determined in passing upon this case seem to be: First. Is the evidence sufficient to maintain plaintiff’s claim that her intestate received an electric shock by his feet coming in contact with scrap iron as alleged? Second. If the evidence is sufficient to sustain that conclusion, was the condition of the wire and the scrap iron the result of negligence of any duty owed by the defendant to the deceased? Third. Does the evidence establish conclusively the contributory negligence of the deceased? Fourth. Was it error on the part of the trial court to reject the cross-examination of plaintiff’s attorney as to the amount of his contingent fee, he having testified in the case? Fifth. Was it error on the part of the trial court to refuse the eleventh instruction, as to contributory negligence from intoxication?

An examination of the testimony submitted on the plaintiff’s behalf compels the conclusion that the shock received by the deceased was not caused by an accidental stepping upon any of these pieces of galvanized iron which lay between the pole and the fence. The deceased had been engaged in moving his furniture that day. With the teamster who hauled it, Gust Nelson, he passed Nyberg’s saloon, on Dodge street, south and a little west from this [397]*397guy-wire, and in the same block. While there it appears that information was brought in that an employee in Norris’s restaurant, next door east of the saloon, had received a shock from this guy-wire. The deceased and his companion started north along the pathway across the block, just west of the saloon which has been mentioned, and the restaurant keeper, Norris, testified that he told them not to go back there; that there was a live wire, and that they would be killed. Nelson neither admits nor denies this statement. They seem to have gone north as far as the rear end of Burket’s undertaking establishment, which was at that time the first building west from the lot on which this pole and guy-wire were situated. The fence along the south end of the latter lot commenced some twelve or fifteen feet to the east of the southeast corner of Burket’s building. To the east side of Burket’s building was, as stated, a pathway running north to Capitol avenue. Between the corner of the Burket building and the fence was a pool of water. It had been raining very hard that day, as all of the witnesses agree, and the day before. The pool of water was an inch or so in depth and two or three yards in diameter, and was close to the west end of this fence. The guy-wire rested on the fence about four feet from i: ¶ west end.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 N.W. 778, 67 Neb. 393, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-omaha-thomson-houston-electric-light-co-v-johnson-neb-1903.