Smith v. Kewanee Light & Power Co.

175 Ill. App. 354, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 154
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 15, 1912
DocketGen. No. 5,682
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 175 Ill. App. 354 (Smith v. Kewanee Light & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Kewanee Light & Power Co., 175 Ill. App. 354, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 154 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Whitney

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action on the case brought by appellee to recover damages for the benefit of next of kin, occasioned by her intestate losing his life while engaged in working as a lineman for the Home Telephone Company, repairing its line, whose poles and wires ran parallel with, in proximity to, and a few feet above the poles and wires of appellant, in the city of Kewanee.

The declaration alleges negligence, in substance that appellant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care, might have known the relative location of the wires of the two companies, and that in the necessary repairing of the lines of the telephone company, its employees would have to pass along its wires, suspended from certain straps hanging down therefrom some eighteen inches, and that said employees were, without any negligence on their part, liable to come in contact with the wires of appellant at the intersection of Tremont and Fifth streets; that appellee’s intestate, on the 27th day of May, 1908, was necessarily engaged in making repairs on the telephone lines, and was seated suspended in a strap or saddle on the wires of the telephone company, using all due care for his own safety, and came in contact with appellant’s wires, which were not insulated, or were defectively insulated, which the deceased did not know, and all of which appellant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care might have known, and that appellee’s intestate was thereby electrocuted; that appellant’s rights to maintain a line in the streets of the city were defined in a certain ordinance, which provided among other things that appellant’s lines should be so constructed, and of such a kind and character as to be as safe as could be made by the best known method of construction, and that they were not so constructed and maintained; that appellant’s wires were permitted to be without proper or sufficient insulation to protect persons coming in contact with them; and that deceased, while working at his duties, necessarily came in contact with the wires of appellant.

We have stated in substance sufficient of the several counts in the declaration for the purpose of considering this appeal.

Issue was made up, and a trial had, appellant offering no evidence, resulting in a verdict and judgment for appellee of eight thousand dollars, and the case is brought here by appeal.

The evidence shows that after the lines of both companies had been erected (the telephone lines above those of appellant), appellant established several high potential wires about two feet below the telephone wires, and above the other potential wires of appellant. The poles of the two companies were about equidistant apart, near the intersection of said Tremont and Fifth streets, and so located that the posts of appellant came about midway between the poles of the. teléphone company. The poles of appellant had cross-arms on them to hold up the wires. The accident occurred near or at appellant’s pole, standing-near the said street intersection. Appellee’s intestate was working at his duties as a lineman for the telephone company, passing along a wire called a messenger wire of the telephone company in a saddle or looped strap suspended from the messenger wire. This saddle was a looped strap with a hook at each end, and the lineman at work hooked each end of the strap to the messenger wire, and seating himself in the loop which hung down about eighteen inches moved himself along from time to time as he wished, and as the necessity of his work required. The messenger wire sagged some with the weight of the lineman. When he reached the pole of appellant, near said street intersection, he was about one-half way between the poles of the telephone company, and naturally at the point of the greatest sag of the messenger wire. The weight of the lineman, seated in the saddle, brought him down toward said high potential wires at least eighteen inches, and as much more as his weight caused the messenger wire to sag. It is safe to say that it cannot be determined from the evidence whether or not the lineman, when he reached appellant’s pole, had to pass over the high potential wires of appellant. Deceased was seen by the witness Doye standing on one of the cross-arms of appellant’s pole. His attention was directed by a crackling like sound, a noise something like a person stepping on a match head, before he saw the deceased. The deceased stood on the cross-arm, facing east, stooping over to the east, with his hands extended, not having hold of anything, waving back and forth. He fell backward, and his climber caught on a feed wire, and he then hung suspended head downward in mid-air, and was soon after taken down dead. Whether he was compelled to get out of his saddle and climb over these high potential wires at said pole by getting onto one of the cross-arms of appellant’s pole, is one of the vital points in this case rendering the case a very close one, and one of the very things that might show liability, or the reverse, of appellant. A small spot, at or near the point where deceased was seen standing on the cross-arm, in the insulation of one of these high potential wires, which usually carried two thousand volts of electricity, was discovered soon after the death of the lineman—a charred spot of about one half inch in diameter. While it is undoubtedly beyond dispute that two thousand volts of electricity would kill, still it is not very clear from the proofs whether electricity escaped from this charred spot and killed the lineman. We can only judge from the circumstances showing that there was a charred spot in the insulation at, or very near, to the place where he was first seen before he fell; and just before he was seen by the witness Doye, witness heard the crackling sound; that he then fell, and was taken dead from the wire where he hung suspended after he fell and caught on that wire. We are of the opinion that he was killed by electricity from appellant’s high potential wire. In order for appellee to recover, however, it was necessary for her to show that the location of the messenger wire and other wires of the telephone company, with relation to appellant’s wire, was such that it might reasonably be necessary for a lineman of the telephone company to go onto ■appellant’s said pole, or to come in contact with appellant’s wires; and that appellant knew, or might by reasonable foresight have known, that contact of an employee with its wires would be likely to result, or might result, fatally, and that the insulation of these high potential wires was imperfect, and had been so long before; that appellant should have known of and remedied their imperfect condition; and that appellee’s intestate did in fact come in contact with these high potential wires, where not sufficiently insulated, and thereby suffered death.

The proof is sufficient to justify the jury in believing that death was not caused by electricity from the telephone company’s wires. There was evidence offered on general lines of the kind and character of "the insulation of appellant’s wires, to show that appellant had not constructed its lines and maintained them, according to the provision of the ordinance, under which it was occupying the streets; that is that it was not so constructed and of such a kind and character as to be as safe as could be made by the best known method of construction. We are not satisfied, from the character of the proof offered for that purpose, that it was not properly constructed and maintained.

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Related

Smith v. Kewanee Light & Power Co.
196 Ill. App. 118 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
175 Ill. App. 354, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-kewanee-light-power-co-illappct-1912.