Summerskill v. Vermont Power & Manufacturing Co.

99 A. 1017, 91 Vt. 251, 1917 Vt. LEXIS 239
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 16, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 99 A. 1017 (Summerskill v. Vermont Power & Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Summerskill v. Vermont Power & Manufacturing Co., 99 A. 1017, 91 Vt. 251, 1917 Vt. LEXIS 239 (Vt. 1917).

Opinion

Haselton, J.

This is an action of case for negligence. Trial was by jury and verdict and judgment were for the plaintiff. The defendant brings exceptions.

At all times material hereto defendant owned and operated an electric plant, and the plaintiff, while in its employ as a lineman, was injured by an electric current which left one of the defendant’s lines and entered the plaintiff’s body. At the close of the evidence the defendant made a motion for a verdict in its favor which, under exception, was overruled.

The grounds of the motion, so far as they pointed out anything, were first, that there was no evidence tending to show any negligence on the part of the defendant that was the proximate cause of the accident, and, secondly, that any negligence that the evidence tended to show was the negligence of a fellow servant. At all times material to this ease the defendant owned a hydro-electric plant at Fairfax Falls where it generated electricity, and from a power house there conducted electricity to St. Albans, a distance of about 14 miles, by two lines of three wires each, one line being the power line and the other the lighting line. Near the power house at Fairfax Falls is a transformer house and at the south limit of St. Albans is a substation. Between the transformer house and the substation the lines carried about 16,000 volts of electricity. The defendant had a business office in St. Albans. The New England telephone and a private telephone of the defendant were used by the company in its operations.

[255]*255Walter H. Yorce was the defendant’s general manager, and A. W. Peterson was its superintendent, his duties among others being to superintend the maintenance and construction of lines, and to employ and discharge men. August 4, 1914, he set about changing the lines at a certain point from the west side of a road to the east side, and for that purpose took out with him five or six men, one of whom was the plaintiff. His intention was first to move the lighting line. To that end he telephoned over the company’s telephone from the St. Albans substation to the power house to cut out the lighting line. One Lassell, a helper at the power house, answered, but one Hurley, the chief operator, who was not intending to work that day, also answered from his house, where messages to the power house were also received over that telephone, and the order to cut out the lighting line was repeated to Hurley, who said “all right.” Then without waiting for a message that the lighting line had been cut out, the superintendent, with the men referred to, started for the point where the work was to be done. Hurley understood the message to be “cut out the power line” and proceeded to the transformer house to do that, and manipulated the switches there for that purpose, but in fact cut out neither the power line nor the lighting line. Before the superintendent with his men reached the point where the-moving of the lighting line was to be done, he stopped at a farm house, and called up the power-house over the New England telephone. One Robinson, an operator under Hurley, answered this time and upon being asked if the lighting line was cut out, answered “yes, everything is all-right,” or “the line is clear.” At that time Robinson knew nothing about the matter, had not seen the switching done, did not look at the switches, and answered as he did, because he supposed that Hurley had done what he had been told to do, although there was evidence to the effect that before Robinson answered the telephone as he did, Hurley had told Robinson that it was the power line the former had cut out.

After Robinson’s unfounded assurance, the superintendent with his men, including the plaintiff, went to the place where the work of moving was to be done, the plaintiff went up a pole to commence work at the suggestion of the superintendent, and received his injury in consequence of the fact that the lighting line was not cut out, but was carrying a heavy voltage of electricity. [256]*256It Was and is conceded that the plaintiff in all that he did was in the exercise of due care.

The defendant had promulgated rules and regulations for the government of employees but had no rule requiring an employee at the power house, who had received an order over the telephone, to report to the person giving the order what had been done in fulfillment thereof. This was generally done, however, done, ‘1 at times, ’ ’ for it was a recognized measure of reasonable safety, in view of the nature of the business; but as we have seen it was not done in this case, and it was for the jury to say whether or not it was negligence on the part of the company not to have such a rule, and whether or not the lack of such a rule was not a proximate cause of the accident. Therefore the motion for a verdict could not be granted irrespective of the fellow servant doctrine and its application here, a question to be considered later. Mahoney’s Adm’r v. Rutland R. R. Co., 78 Vt. 244, 62 Atl. 722; Griffin v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 87 Vt. 278, 287, 89 Atl. 220.

So in considering this motion for a verdict, we do not discuss the fellow servant question, since if the defendant’s negligence and that of fellow servants of the plaintiff concurred as proximate causes of the injury to the plaintiff, the defendant’s motion for a verdict could not prevail.

The court submitted to the jury the question of whether the company’s telephone, over which the order to cut out the lighting line was given, was defective and was a proximate cause of the injury. The evidence tended to show that the telephone was noisy, sometimes less and sometimes more, sometimes very noisy, and that this was so because the telephone wire was strung on the poles over which the high tension wires were strung conveying about 16,000 volts of electricity.

To the submission of this question to the jury the defendant excepted. One ground of the exception was that there was no evidence tending to show that the defective telephone was the proximate cause of the injury, because all the evidence was that the telephone was working all right on the day of the accident.. But, to say nothing more, since the evidence tended to show that the telephone message to “cut out the lighting line” was heard by the one receiving it as a message to “cut out the power line,” the jury was justified in finding that the telephone was not working all right. The defendant in its brief states that the plain[257]*257tiff’s evidence tended to show that it was because of the defective company telephone that the order referred to was misunderstood.

The other grounds of the exception were that there was no evidence tending to show that the plaintiff did not know all about the defective .telephone, and that the evidence showed affirmatively that he did know all about it, because he testified that a short time before the accident he talked into the telephone and it was very noisy. But the fact that he had once or twice talked into the telephone, fell far short of showing that he knew all about it. To put the matter affirmatively, the whole testimony tended to show that he did not know all about it and did not assume the risks consequent upon its defects and caprices.

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Related

In re J. F.
365 A.2d 258 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1976)
Healy, Admr. v. Moore
187 A. 679 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1936)
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111 A. 346 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
99 A. 1017, 91 Vt. 251, 1917 Vt. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summerskill-v-vermont-power-manufacturing-co-vt-1917.