Person v. Cauldwell-Wingate Co., Inc.

187 F.2d 832, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 2319
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 14, 1951
Docket183, Docket 21900
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 187 F.2d 832 (Person v. Cauldwell-Wingate Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Person v. Cauldwell-Wingate Co., Inc., 187 F.2d 832, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 2319 (2d Cir. 1951).

Opinion

L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

The defendants appeal from a judgment, entered upon the verdict of a jury after a trial of the action which was before us in Person v. Cauldwell-Wingate Company, Inc., 2 Cir., 176 F.2d 237. Upon the first trial the judge had dismissed the complaint when the plaintiff rested on the ground that she had not made out a case; but we reversed because we thought that the evidence unanswered would have supported a verdict. Upon the second trial the plaintiff’s evidence was substantially the same; but the defendants put in evidence which we shall mention in a moment. The principal questions now raised are, once more, whether the evidence supported a verdict, and next, whether the judge’s *834 charge was wrong. In what we say we shall assume an acquaintance with what appears in our first opinion. Upon this trial the defendants proved that the “jumper” which connected the two high tension wires, when it was originally installed, was not itself a separate piece of wire, as the evidence on the first trial showed, but was the continuation of one of the high tension wires, which, after passing through the “clevis” of one insulator bell, had been twisted on itself, and the free end carried around the pole, six to ten inches away from it, and made fast to the other high tension wire by a “Burndy connector.” In short, the original “jumper” had not been a separate wire, but the end of one of the high tension wires. The jury was justified in inferring from this substitution that the high tension wire, of which the “jumper” was formed, had sagged between poles and had been pulled taut; and that the end had been cut off and a new “jumper” substituted, fastened at each end by a “Burndy connector.” The record does not indeed contain any evidence that this had been true of that particular high tension wire; but it does contain evidence that such pulling had been done in the neighborhood, and that confirms the explanation which we have suggested. On the other hand, documentary evidence proved, in a way that no jury was justified in disregarding, that Burton, the plaintiff’s best witness, had not been on the job until November, 1943, so that the interval between May IS and the time when he could have seen Pole No. 1422 was about six months instead of three and a half. The length of that interval was important upon the first trial only upon the issue whether the upper guy wire was in place before the subcontractor left the job and, as neither defendant raises that question upon this appeal, the new evidence was not important.

First, as to the sufficiency of the evidence as a whole. On the first appeal the defendants had not put in evidence the plans and specifications which the Army officers in charge of the work furnished to the contractor and on which the subcontractor did the work. These were put in upon the second trial; and the plaintiff argues that they show that the high tension wire should have been carried over Pole No. 1422 by one or two “pins,” fixed in the top of the pole and carrying insulators. That is certainly not true; all that the specifications required, or indeed that the plaintiff’s own electrical expert said, was that, if the angle beyond the wire on one side of a pole was less than twelve degrees, one such “pin” might be used; and, if the angle was less than twenty-four degrees, two might be used. It was only when the angle was more than twenty-four degrees that the construction should be adopted on Pole No. 1422. Therefore the most that the evidence warranted a jury in finding was that Pole No. 1422 could have been properly rigged on one or two “pins”; not that it should have been. The plans and specifications contained no direction as to how the pole in question should be rigged ; and the defendants did not rely upon them. They did, however, put in testimony that all the work was done under the immediate personal direction of an Army officer in general charge of the construction ; and his orders, they insisted, excused any defects in construction. We regret that the judge did not take a special verdict on that issue, for the jury may not have believed the testimony; but in its absence we are obliged to dispose of the appeal on the assumption that they did believe it. Thus it raised the principal question: whether the defendants might safely rely upon the instructions given them, or whether they were to any degree responsible for the safety of the construction, and, if so, how far. The question of the sufficiency of the evidence upon this issue coalesces with that of the correctness of the judge’s charge.

A crucial passage of his instructions was the following: “ ‘Would competent electrical engineers have anticipated that the jumper thus installed might have touched the strain plate and would they have anticipated that a lineman climbing the pole might have touched the guy wire thus energized ?’ If you conclude that they would, then you have patent danger. If you decide that competent electrical en *835 gineers would have foreseen these contingencies, then you must answer the question ‘Were the defendants negligent?” in the affirmative, notwithstanding that you may find that the defendants installed the jumper in that manner pursuant to the directions of the Army engineers.” This put the case before them in substantially the words which we had used in our former opinion as a direction upon a new trial; but the defendants insist that to set the standard of a “competent electrical engineer” did not conform to the law, as the New York courts have laid it down; and since this is a case in which the jurisdiction of the district court depended upon diversity of citizenship, the New York decisions are authoritative. The controlling decisions are two: Hardie v. Charles P. Boland Co. 1 and Ryan v. Feeney & Sheehan Building Co. 2 So far as anyone has found, the point has not been ruled in that court since 1924; and since then the only decision in any of the Appellate Divisions, even remotely in point, does not add anything to the doctrine as it had been enunciated. 3 Hardie v. Charles P. Boland Co., supra, came up upon appeal from a judgment entered upon the verdict of a jury in an action by an employee against his employer to recover for personal injuries caused by the fall of a chimney on which he was at work. The employer was a contractor, engaged in putting up a building in accordance with plans prepared by owner’s architect. The plaintiff had invoked the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur with the usual result that everybody became confused, and the Court of Appeals thought that the confusion had so far invaded the trial that the judgment could not stand. The trial court had, however, charged the jury as to the extent to which the defendant was justified in relying upon plans of the architect, in language which “stated 'the correct rule for such a case such as this,” 205 N.Y. at page 342, 98 N.E. at page 663; and which would have resulted in affirmance save for the confusion we have mentioned. These were the words approved: “The contractor is presumed to know his business. But unless the defect was such a defect as he ought to have realized and known about it, which he ought to have anticipated and thus have avoided the injury, then, there is no negligence even though the chimney fell.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

John's Heating Service v. Lamb
46 P.3d 1024 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2002)
Lindsay Manufacturing Co. v. Universal Surety Co.
519 N.W.2d 530 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1994)
Bd. of Educ. of Clifton v. WR Grace
609 A.2d 92 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1992)
Jackson v. City of Franklin
554 N.E.2d 932 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1988)
McFadden v. Ten-T Corp.
529 So. 2d 192 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1988)
Daniel Edward Bynum v. Fmc Corporation
770 F.2d 556 (Fifth Circuit, 1985)
Johnston v. United States
568 F. Supp. 351 (D. Kansas, 1983)
Portis v. Folk Construction Co.
694 F.2d 520 (Eighth Circuit, 1982)
Portis v. Folk Construction Company, Inc.
694 F.2d 520 (Eighth Circuit, 1982)
Hunt v. Blasius
384 N.E.2d 368 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1978)
Alvin H. Wright v. United States of America
568 F.2d 153 (Tenth Circuit, 1978)
Hunt v. Blasius
370 N.E.2d 617 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1977)
Sanner v. Ford Motor Co.
364 A.2d 43 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1976)
Humphries v. Consolidated Edison Co.
314 F. Supp. 1052 (S.D. New York, 1969)
Littlehale v. E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co.
268 F. Supp. 791 (S.D. New York, 1966)
Leininger v. Stearns-Roger Manufacturing Company
404 P.2d 33 (Utah Supreme Court, 1965)
Davis v. Henderlong Lumber Company
221 F. Supp. 129 (N.D. Indiana, 1963)
Romano v. ROSSANO CONSTRUCTION CO. INC.
171 N.E.2d 853 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 F.2d 832, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 2319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/person-v-cauldwell-wingate-co-inc-ca2-1951.