Terrell v. . Washington

73 S.E. 888, 158 N.C. 282, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 33
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 28, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 73 S.E. 888 (Terrell v. . Washington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Terrell v. . Washington, 73 S.E. 888, 158 N.C. 282, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 33 (N.C. 1912).

Opinion

This action was brought to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been caused by the defendant's negligence. Plaintiff was employed by the defendant as a lineman, in connection with the operation of its electric lighting plant, and on the day of his injury he was (284) directed by his foreman to climb one of the poles for the purpose of repairing or removing one of the wires attached thereto. In order to perform his work it was necessary for the defendant to wear spurs or spikes on his feet, and to fasten himself with his belt to the pole, and while he was near the top, doing his work, the pole fell to the ground, rebounded, and caused him serious injury, by reason of which he became unconscious and was confined to the hospital under medical treatment for a long time. There was evidence tending to show that the pole was rotten and in very bad condition several inches under the ground, and that it broke three or four inches below the surface of the ground. It was a juniper pole and should have lasted, so as to be *Page 239 used with perfect safety, from six to twenty years, and it had been standing only three years when it fell with the plaintiff. There was no rule or custom imposing upon the plaintiff the duty of inspection before ascending the pole, and there was nothing in its appearance calculated to put him on notice as to its condition. Above the ground it seemed to be sound and trustworthy, except, as one of the witnesses testifies, at the very top it was rotten; but that part of it which he was required to use was apparently sound and safe.

There is ample evidence in the record to show that the pole was not one which should have been selected in the beginning, and after ordinary inspection, as sufficiently sound and strong for the uses to which it was intended to be applied. An are light was suspended from the pole by a wire, the other end of which was attached to another pole on the opposite side of the street.

A witness for the plaintiff gave the following description of the pole: "I looked at the pole after he fell. I do not know what became of it. The pole was rotten. It was as rotten as it could be. It broke off between three and four inches under the ground. They did not have any guy wires supporting the pole at that time. They did not have any braces of any sort on it to support it. It had the strain of the light on it. They did not have anything on it to relieve that strain; they only had the pole set back like this. It was leaning from the lamp. The lamp pulled it in the street. If it had not been for the lamp on (285) it, it would have fallen like it started. It was a juniper pole. It was rotten between three and four inches below the ground. It was rotten on the outside." This witness further stated that the pole was not rotten above the ground, and that if an inspection had been made, it would have been taken down, and that no inspection was made to his knowledge.

Another witness gave this description of the pole: "The pole was broken off three or four inches under the ground and was decayed or rotten. You could take little pieces of the wood in your hands and break it up into dust. It had heart that looked sound, but you could take it in your hands and break it up. No one passing there could tell whether the pole was rotten or not, on account of the shell on the outside being hard. You could not tell whether the pole was rotten by the outside, nor unless you pried into the skin on the outside. You could tell by digging around it. There were no guy wires or braces supporting the pole."

The defendant introduced the affidavit of Manly Pearson, made a few days after the pole fell, and therein, among other things, he made this statement: "There was grass grown around the pole at the bottom. *Page 240 Pole seemed to be solid. Showed no appearance of decay above ground or above grass. Pole broke off about three inches underground. Where pole broke, that is, place on pole, it was rotten and decayed: you could stick your finger in it; it was spongy, soft, thoroughly decayed; and the only solid spot in the pole was a streak in center, the heart, about an inch or so in diameter. There was no support to poles. There were no `guy' wires on poles. The only wire on pole that fell was wire running from it across street to other pole, from the center of which in the middle of street was suspended an electric `arc' light, weight about 50 pounds. Distance from pole to pole about 40 feet. There was a powerful strain on poles, pulling against each other, and weight of light, and no supports, `guy' wires, or anything behind poles to resist this pressure. I have been engaged in this kind of work for eighteen years. Have worked in South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, and other States, and most all poles had `guy' wires on back of poles to support them. These `guy' wires are necessary to hold (286) poles in position. It is not customary for a lineman to examine poles under the ground, when working on them. That is always done by another man."

There was evidence to the effect that it was not customary to guy poles like the one in question with no more strain on them than it had, and that the appearance of the pole above the ground did not indicate that it was rotten or unsound, and the city did not have its poles inspected except in a casual or general way, "that is, by passing and looking at them." If the pole had been guyed, it would not have fallen, though there was evidence it was not customary to guy such poles.

There was much additional evidence introduced by the parties to sustain their respective contentions, but it is not necessary to an understanding of the case that we should set it out.

The court, among other instructions, charged the jury as follows:

If Terrell was an experienced lineman, and there was no regular pole inspector employed by the defendant, the duty of inspecting a pole, as to its safe or dangerous condition, rested as much upon the plaintiff, Terrell, as it did upon the defendant town; and if you find from the evidence that the plaintiff was a person of ordinary information and had experience in the business in which he was engaged, and the town employed no regular or special pole inspector, then he assumed the risk of the breaking of any pole which he was called upon in the line of his duty to climb, not due to any defect in the original setting, and the town owed him no duty to inspect it and inform him of its defects, or to keep it sound; and if you find these to be the facts, you will answer the first issue (as to negligence) "No." *Page 241

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.E. 888, 158 N.C. 282, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terrell-v-washington-nc-1912.