Riley v. New England Telephone & Telegraph Co.

68 N.E. 17, 184 Mass. 150, 1903 Mass. LEXIS 962
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 68 N.E. 17 (Riley v. New England Telephone & Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riley v. New England Telephone & Telegraph Co., 68 N.E. 17, 184 Mass. 150, 1903 Mass. LEXIS 962 (Mass. 1903).

Opinion

Khowlton, O. J.

The plaintiff was driving along Bridge Street in Cambridge, upon a market wagon, the hubs of whose wheels projected six inches beyond the rims and spokes. The body of the wagon had wings extending laterally as far as the hubs. A telegraph pole of the defendant was set close to the curbstone on the inside and it leaned a little towards the centre of the street. A standpipe used to fill watering carts stood beside the telegraph pole, and the dripping from it caused a sinking or depression in the cobblestone pavement, small in area, but two or three inches in depth near the curbstone and opposite the telegraph pole. As the right forward wheel of the plaintiff’s wagon fell into this hollow, the body of the wagon lurched to the right toward the pole, so that the wing struck the pole, and the collision threw the plaintiff out and injured him. The pole was erected in accordance with a license granted by the board of aldermen, which required the defendant to maintain it as nearly perpendicular as practicable. There was a question whether its leaning was a departure from the requirements of the license.

The plaintiff asked the judge to instruct the jury as follows : “ The defendant is liable to the plaintiff in this action if the latter, while travelling on the public highway, and in the exercise of due care, was injured by reason of a telegraph pole belonging to the defendant, although said pole was erected and maintained by the defendant in accordance with the license granted by the board of aldermen of the city of Cambridge.” The judge refused to give the instruction requested and gave the jury this instruction: “If you find that the pole was erected and maintained in accordance with the specifications of the municipal officers, and that there was no negligence on the part of the defendant in its construction or maintenance of the pole, then the plaintiff cannot recover, even if in the exercise of due care, in the absence of any direction by the municipal officers to alter the location or construction of said pole.” The exceptions to the refusal and to the instruction, bring us to the consideration of the statute under which the pole was erected. The St. 1851, c. 247, § 2, is as follows: “Whenever injury shall be done to any person, or to the buildings or other property of any person or corporation, by the posts, wires, or other apparatus of any telegraphic line, the company or individual, being proprietor of the [152]*152same, shall be held responsible in damages to the person or corporation so injured.” The St. 1859, c. 260, which was doubtless enacted to change the law stated in Young v. Yarmouth, 9 Gray, 386, provides that “ Towns which may be otherwise liable in damages to any person for injury to his person or property, occasioned by telegraphic posts or other fixtures erected on highways or town ways, shall not be discharged from such liability ” by reason of anything contained in the act authorizing the erection of such posts, and makes the companies erecting the posts or fixtures liable to reimburse and repay to towns the full amount of damages and costs recovered by any party injured. These two statutes were combined in the Gen. Sts. c. 64, § 11, with a slight change, and re-enacted in Pub. Sts. c. 109, § 12, and again re-enacted with only verbal changes in the R. L. c. 122, § 15.

The first of these two statutes creates a liability without any reference to negligence. The Legislature seems to have recognized that the erection of the poles and fixtures in public ways, would create obstructions which might interfere to some extent with the use of the public streets and increase the liability of travellers to accidents. Such obstructions, whether placed in a sidewalk or in a part of a street designed for use by vehicles, being there when the streets are lighted and when they are in darkness, and in every variety of possible conditions, subject persons in the exercise of due care to risks which otherwise would not exist. While the Legislature saw fit to authorize the use of the streets for telegraph lines, it provided at the same time that the telegraph company should be liable for damages to all persons injured in person or property by these erections.

Doubtless the fact that electricity is a subtle and dangerous agency, which was less understood in 1851 when this statute was enacted than it is now, was an added reason for creating this legal liability without regard to negligence. Wires and other apparatus, as possible causes of injury, are treated by the statute like the posts. It might be difficult to prove, in case of an injury by a transmitter of electricity, whether the injury was caused by negligence or by pure accident. The statute indicates an intention on the part of the Legislature, that these erections in the street, which in many places would constitute a public nuisance if not authorized by the statute, should be permitted only upon [153]*153condition that those who use them to their own profit should make compensation for damages caused by them.

Both the principle involved and the statutory declaration of liability are substantially the same as appear in R. L. c. 102, § 146, which declares that “ The owner or keeper of a dog shall be liable in an action of tort to a person injured by it in double the amount of damages sustained by him.” The keeping of dogs is authorized by law, and in many cases is meritorious. Usually, in individual cases, it is not attended with obvious danger, but the fact that it materially increases the risk of injury to innocent persons, is a reason for making dog owners liable for injuries caused by their dogs, even though the owners are free from fault. We are, therefore, of opinion that this instruction should have been given..

The second instruction requested, that “ contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff is no defence to this action unless so gross as to amount to fraud,” was rightly refused. In this respect the statute is like that last quoted. The statute as to dogs is silent in regard to care on the part of the injured person. But owners of dogs are not insurers against injuries inflicted by them upon persons whose negligence contributes to the injury. Munn v. Reed, 4 Allen, 431. Plumley v. Birge, 124 Mass. 57. To make a defendant, under this statute, an insurer against injuries to persons whose own fault is one of the causes of the injury imposes too great a liability upon the corporation. It would be contrary to the usual rule of liability in actions of tort, where the cause of the liability is not more culpable than negligence. The language of this statute does not indicate that this absolute liability to persons injured, applies to persons who, by their own conduct, would be precluded from recovery against a defendant in an action for negligence.

The R. L. c. 111, § 270, in relation to the liability of railroad companies for damages by fives kindled by sparks from locomotive engines, deals with a different kind of subject and it has been construed a little more strictly. Bowen v. Boston Albany Railroad, 179 Mass. 524. Railroad companies are held accountable for fires set by their engines under ordinary conditions. The condition of the property does not ordinarily contribute as an active agent to the kindling of the fire. It is a passive state [154]*154which was contemplated when the statute was passed. That statute leaves the owner entitled to his remedy unless guilty of gross negligence which is culpable.

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Bluebook (online)
68 N.E. 17, 184 Mass. 150, 1903 Mass. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riley-v-new-england-telephone-telegraph-co-mass-1903.