Rutledge v. Swinney

169 S.W. 17, 261 Mo. 128, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 245
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 14, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 169 S.W. 17 (Rutledge v. Swinney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rutledge v. Swinney, 169 S.W. 17, 261 Mo. 128, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 245 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

Plaintiff sues for injuries sustained while worMng for defendants as a lineman. Defendants are receivers of the Sedaba Light & Traction Company.

This is the second appeal in this case. On the first trial plaintiff obtained a judgment of $5000, which was reversed by the Kansas City Court of Appeals on account of erroneous instructions. [170 Mo. App. l. c. 265.] Upon a second trial plaintiff had judgment for $9000, from which defendants appeal to this court.

The plaintiff sustained his alleged injuries by falling twenty-one feet from an electric light pole upon a brick sidewalk. The nature of his injuries will be noted in connection with our conclusions.

The plaintiff, on the afternoon of February 8, 1912, was directed to assist/defendants’ foreman Gus Bergfelder and two other employees in removing a Horneberger transformer from a pole and replacing same with a larger transformer known as a General Electric.

The lighting plant for which defendants were receivers had been constructed several years. Some of their poles had become rotten at the ground, and many of the cross-arms on their poles used to support wires [135]*135and transformers were also defective and had to he replaced with new cross-arms. Defendants had ordered all of their “Horneberger” transformers replaced with “General Electrics.” The latter is described as being a larger transformer than the Horneberger. The- sizes and weights of these transformers are not stated in the evidence or pleadings, and, while some originals and models were introduced, and the trial court and jury may have obtained a correct knowledge of their respective sizes, it is somewhat difficult for us to do so from the printed record.

The immediate cause of plaintiff’s fall was the decayed condition of part of a cross-arm upon which he was installing a new transformer. He testifies that after the old transformer had been lowered to the ground and the new transformer raised and hung upon the cross-arm, it was his duty to connect, paint and solder several wires; in which work it was necessary for him to go both below and above the transformer. That, on account of the position of numerous wires, he was compelled to unfasten his belt from the pole and climb over the transformer; in doing so he could not secure a hold upon the pole with his hands, but was compelled to sustain himself by taking hold of the cross-arm to which the transformer was hanging. There is no dispute about the fact that the cross-arm appeared sound, and may have been sound where it was fastened to the pole, but a short distance from the pole it was only sound about a fourth of an inch deep, and the interior was so rotten that it crumbled or sloughed off under plaintiff’s weight, or such of his weight as he placed upon it with his hand.

Plaintiff testified that he was performing a “rush job,” commenced about three p. m. That he was instructed by the foreman to complete the job so as not to interrupt the service to some nine customers who obtained lights through this particular transformer. According to plaintiff’s evidence it required about [136]*136three hours to take clown an old transformer and replace it with a new one, many wires having to he connected, soldered and painted and other appliances changed. That after arriving at the pole they had less than two hours to complete the job, the lights being needed about 4:30 on that short February day. Plaintiff further testified that this pole stood in a leaning position, but that it was not his duty to inspect poles or cross-arms, and that Mr. B'ergfelder, defendants’ foreman, had recently been going over defendants’ lighting system inspecting the cross-arms with a hammer and chisel; that by this method he detected many cross-arms which were decayed, and caused plaintiff and other employees to replace such defective cross-arms with new ones. That he was told not to inspect, and was not furnished with tools suitable for that purpose. That the only proper tools for inspecting' cross-arms were a hand axe or hammer and chisel; that, while the foreman kept a hammer and chisels locked in a box at defendants’ office with which he inspected cross-arms, in directing what tools and appliances should be taken to the place where plaintiff was injured, said foreman omitted the hammer and chisel.

Plaintiff further testified that in the morning of the day he was injured he assisted defendants’ foreman in taking down a Plorneberger transformer and hanging a larger one in its place in another part of the city; that before making that change defendants ’ foreman climbed the pole and inspected with hammer and chisel the cross-arm upon which the new transformer was to be hung. Plaintiff also testified that because he had been told not to inspect, because no tools suitable for that purpose were furnished or taken to the place of the accident, and because the pole where he undertook to hang the transformer contained a new cross-arm near the top thereof, he supposed defendants’ foreman had recently inspected that pole and the cross-arms thereon, and, consequently, did not un[137]*137dertake any inspection except with his eyes. That he looked and saw that the cross-arm upon which the new transformer was to be hnng appeared to be sound. There were four cross-arms on the pole; the transformer was hung on the second one from the bottom.

Plaintiff further testified that when he suggested how a certain kind of work should be done to secure the safety of employees, defendants’ foreman said: “When you fellows are authorized to inspect or authorized to direct work, then we will do the way you want it done . . .; until then you will do what you are told to do.”

George Green, a witness for plaintiff, stated that he worked for defendants under Mr. Bergfelder, the foreman, for several months, quitting the job December 23, 1911, prior to plaintiff’s injury on February 8, 1912. Mr. Green stated that foreman Bergfelder went about over defendants’ electric light system almost every day inspecting cross-arms with hammer and chisel, and inspecting poles at the ground with a steel bar; that he ordered poles and cross-arms removed whenever he found by such inspections they were defective or rotten. That when suggestions were made by the linemen about how they thought work ought to be done, the foreman would inform them that they must “do what they were told to do.” Witness stated that it was customary for the foreman to inspect poles and cross-arms before sending linemen to repair them. The defendants’ attorneys did not cross-examine this witness.

C. G. Green also testified for plaintiff that he frequently saw defendants’ foreman Bergfelder going over town inspecting poles, wires and cross-arms, and making notes in a small book.

David F. Webster, defendants’ superintendent,testified that he never gave any orders to his linemen about inspecting, but it was the custom for each lineman to do his own inspecting of cross-arms, which [138]*138could readily be done with a pair of plyers, connectors and a screw-driver, which tools every lineman was required to furnish and carry with him. Witness said that he had never climbed any poles, and seldom knew when cross-arms were defective, except when the linemen reported them to him; and never instructed any of the employees to climb poles to inspect cross-arms, and only supposed cross-arms were repaired when they became so badly out of order that the defects could be seen from the ground.

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Bluebook (online)
169 S.W. 17, 261 Mo. 128, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rutledge-v-swinney-mo-1914.