Smith v. Missouri & Kansas Telephone Co.

87 S.W. 71, 113 Mo. App. 429, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 227
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 87 S.W. 71 (Smith v. Missouri & Kansas Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Missouri & Kansas Telephone Co., 87 S.W. 71, 113 Mo. App. 429, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 227 (Mo. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

— Action for damages for personal injuries consequent to a fall from the top of a telephone pole where plaintiff, a lineman,, was engaged in making certain repairs. Negligence on the part of defendant it is charged, was the producing cause of the fall. Plaintiff recovered judgment in the sum of three thousand dollars. No complaint is made of an excessive verdict but defendant asks a reversal because of errors claimed, to have been committed during-the progress of the trial, first among which was the overruling of its demurrer to the evidence.

The injury occurred September 8, 1903, in the city of St. Joseph. At that time the city was operating its own system of public lighting generating and using electricity for that purpose. The business of producing and supplying electricity for private use, either as power- or for lighting was conducted by the street railway company. Defendant was operating a telephone exchange. All three corporations used the public streets for their lines of wire — strung upon poles — which carried the power to the various points of use throughout the city. The currents of electricity carried through the streets. by the city and railway company being highly potential, the wires through which they flowed were insulated, and in many instances strung upon the same line of poles— defendant employing none but currents of low power used in their transmission bare wires carried upon its own pole lines. The pole from which plaintiff fell was situated on the east side of St. Joseph avenue at its intersection with Park street. It belonged to the city, but was in a line jointly used by the city and the railway company for the carriage of wires. This line came from the south from where the power was generated and pass[434]*434ed along the east side of St. Joseph avenue to and beyond Broadway street. The wires carried by it with which Ave are concerned consisted of two' used by the railway company in the transmission of currents of elecity for private use, termed in the evidence “primary wires,” and one used by the city in feeding its arc lamps, called the “city wire.” As thenegligent act complained of is said to have occurred upon this line at or near Broadway street some sis blocks north of the place of injury it is important, in reviewing the action of the court in overruling the demurrer, to- understand the details of the situation at thatpoint; and we willselect as the focus of observation a certain pole, a unit in this line locatedat a point where the highway slightly deflects in is course. This pole is called in the evidence the “railway pole” and before the accident carried on the eastern projection of two cross arms the two “primary wires” and the “city wire” referred to. On the opposite side of the avenue was situated an important lead in defendant’s telephone system which consisted of a heavy pole line provided Avith cross arms and pins sufficient to support and carry fifty wires. Coming from the south to the “railway pole” the direction of the avenue was east of north. Shortly before reaching the pole it curved somewhat sharply to the left until, pointed due north, it proceeded in that direction upon a tangent. The telephone lines following the course of the street, curved to the left at the point opposite the railway pole.

In order to strengthen the resistance of the telephone pole located in the curve to the strain imposed upon it by the weight and tension of taut wires, ‘defendant set a guy pole about one foot, north of the “railway pole” and from the top thereof ran a tightly drawn wire across the street to the telephone pole securely fastened to the tops of both poles and of sufficient strength to hold the telephone pole in place provided the guy pole retained its position. This was attempted to be secured by run [435]*435ning a tightly drawn wire attached to the top of the gny pole and to an anchor planted in the ground some twenty-five feet east of the pole, the idea being that with such construction the telephone pole could not incline westward without drawing with it the top of the guy pole which could not be moved in that direction without the extraction of the buried anchor from its position. The first pole in line south of the “railway pole” was about twenty-five feet distant therefrom and carried on its top a lamp.fed by the “city wire.” There'was but one cross arm attached to this pole but the “city wire” was looped into the lamp above from the opposite ends of a smaller cross arm attached to the other at a right angle thereto, thus preserving in the passage of the wire in and out of the lamp the line of its course. The position of this wire on the cross arms was immediately east of the “railway” and “city” poles; to the east thereof at intervals of about ten inches were the two “primary” wires. Up to this point there is no dispute over the facts. The differences all relate to those we are about to detail; and with respect to them we shall adopt plaintiff’s version in the consideration of the demurrer.

The guy pole had been in position for something less than two months. It is claimed that while at its base it was in line with the other poles, it was raked to the east when set so that its top was approximately three feet east of its base and cleared the outside “primary” wire; but owing to 'the negligent manner in which it was set, the top had been pulled west and north until the west perpendicular line of the pole was on a line with the pins carrying the intermediate “primary wire,” with the result that sometime shortly preceding the accident the outside primary wire, owing to the great pressure exerted upon it by the guy pole, tore out its fastenings from the cross arms on the “railway” and “city” poles and was thrown across the “city wire” upon its individual cross arm on the “city” pole, and also across [436]*436the other “primary wire” at a point some five feet south of the railway pole. This latter contact resulted in the generation of sufficient heat to melt both “primary” wires. Their parted ends dropped to the ground, after which the contact between the “primary” wire and the “city wire” at the city pole continued. It appears from some of the evidence that the insulation was old and deféctive on all of these wires. The negligence in the setting of the guy pole appears from the following facts:

The length of the pole was some thirty-five feet. It was set in the ground about five and one-half feet. The anchor, a piece of po'.e five or six feet long,- was buried to a depth of about fi ve feet. Itwas notplaced upon a prolongation of a line drawn from the telephone pole to the guy pole but from six to eight feet north of such imaginary line, so the wire connecting the tops of the twopoles and that connecting the top of the guy pole to the anchor formed two sides of an obtuse triangle with the guy pole at their intersecting point, the third side — the one opposite to the angle — being an imaginary line drawn from the telephone pole to the anchor. The result of such construction imposed upon the guy pole a pulling strain northward against which the anchor offered no counteracting force and which, when yielded to, relaxed the tension of the connecting wire between pole and anchor and afforded response by the guy pole to the westward pull of the telephone pole. After the accident it was found that the top of the guy pole inclined northward about three feet. It no longer raked to the east-but stood in a perpendicular line east and west.

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.W. 71, 113 Mo. App. 429, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-missouri-kansas-telephone-co-moctapp-1905.