Trapp v. Rockford Electric Co.

186 Ill. App. 379, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 907
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 15, 1914
DocketGen. No. 5,904
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 186 Ill. App. 379 (Trapp v. Rockford Electric 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
Trapp v. Rockford Electric Co., 186 Ill. App. 379, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 907 (Ill. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Arthur Trapp, twelve years and four months old, touched or took hold of the lower end of a hoisting wire attached to a pole and used in raising and lowering an arc light, operated by the Rockford Electric Company in the city of Rockford, on the evening of July 7, 1912, and received a charge of electricity which instantly killed him. He left surviving a mother, a father, who was in an insane asylum, and nine brothers and sisters. His mother was appointed administratrix of his estate and she brought this suit against the Rockford Electric Company to recover for the loss to the next of kin of the deceased. She filed a declaration, containing several counts, charging liability in various ways. There was a jury trial and a verdict and a judgment for plaintiff for $5,200, from which defendants below appeal.

It is argued that error occurred in the impanelment of the jury. Appellee’s counsel put a question to a juror. That question is not in the bill of exceptions. A colloquy ensued between court and counsel as to whether appellee’s counsel in questioning a juror concerning the degree of care to be required of deceased should insert the qualification of reasonable prudence. The court expressed the opinion that that qualification need not be inserted in the question and the court held that it would allow the juror to be questioned on the line he had indicated. An exception to that ruling was taken. The bill of exceptions does not show what questions were propounded, what answers were made nor whether the juror was accepted or rejected. Obviously, no error at that point is shown. The question will be discussed further in considering instructions.

North Horsman street runs north and south and Lapp court crosses it at right angles. On the north side of Lapp court and on the east and west sides of North Horsman street were two poles, owned by appellant and stationed between the sidewalk and the traveled part of the street where the ground was level. There were two cross-arms upon each pole. A cable across the street supported an arc light in the center of the street. Upon these cross-arms were electric light wires and from these main wires on the lower cross-arms of the pole at the northwest corner two feed wires ran to the arc light. A small hoisting wire extended from a point about four and one-half feet above the street to a point three feet above the top cross-arm and from there over a pulley to the mechanism about the arc light in the center of the street. About three feet above the lower end of the hoisting wire was an insulator. This hoisting wire was not connected with any wire which conveyed electricity, but the obvious purpose of the insulator near its lower end was to protect those who used the hoisting wire from any accidental current of electricity thereon. The hoisting wire was attached to the pole by a snap or lock at its lower end. This lamp was in a thickly-settled residence district. Many children were accustomed to play about that corner in the evenings, attracted no doubt by the light. This pole at the northwest corner was commonly used by the children as a goal in their games. Some twenty-seven .children had been playing about there that evening, which was Sunday, and ten or twelve were playing there at the time Arthur was killed. He and others were playing hide and seek. Arthur ran up to the pole, struck it three times and thereby liberated himself from the game, picked up a piece of tin from the street and said he was going to play “electric man,” and either touched or took hold of the lower end of this hoisting wire and fell dead. There is no doubt but that he received a heavy charge of electricity, such as was used in the night to supply the feed wires. Whether the apparatus for conveying heavy voltage from the pole to the lamp and the apparatus for lowering and hoisting the lamp were out of repair, whether the insulation on the feed wires had become defective and dangerous, how the electricity passed from the feed wire to the hoisting wire, whether the insulation on the hoisting wire was out of repair, and whether these things were unsafe and had been so for so long that appellant should have known the fact and repaired the defect, were all questions for the jury, to be determined from the direct and circumstantial evidence introduced.

It is argued that the court erred in rulings upon evidence. Mrs. Snyder, who lived on North Horsman street a little south of Lapp court, testified that between the pole in question and the next pole south of it, the electric wires pass through trees and that the leaves of those trees, where they came into contact with the wires, had often been on fire during a period of more than a year before this accident, and that more than a month before Arthur was killed she saw them on fire and called up the electric company by telephone and was answered by a man and reported to him the fact concerning the fire communicated from said wire to said leaves. It is argued that this conversation was incompetent, as she did not recognize the voice of the person with whom she talked. There are a number of cases in the Appellate Court reports holding that a recognition of the voice of the person talking is indispensable to the admission of a conversation over a telephone. That rule, however, is not applicable to a conversation with a business house over the telephone of such house and in relation to the business there carried on. Upon this subject in a similar case the Supreme Court of Missouri, in Wolfe v. Missouri Pac. Ry. Co., 97 Mo. 473, 3 L. R. A. 539, 542, used the following language:

“The courts of justice do not ignore the great improvement in the means of intercommunication which the telephone has made. Its nature, operation and ordinary uses are facts of general scientific knowledge, of which the courts will take judicial notice as part of public contemporary history. When a person places himself in connection with the telephone system through an instrument in his office, he thereby invites communication, in relation to his business, through that channel. Conversations so held are as admissible in evidence as personal interviews by a customer with an unknown clerk in charge of an ordinary shop would be in relation to the business there carried on. The fact that the voice at the telephone was not identified does not render the conversation inadmissible. The ruling here announced is intended to determine merely the admissibility of such conversations in such circumstances; but not the effect of such evidence after its admission. It may be entitled, in each instance, to much or little weight in the estimation of the triers of fact, according to their views of its credibility, and of the other testimony in support, or in contradiction, of it.”

Our Supreme Court approved of this rule in Godair v. Ham Nat. Banh, 225 Ill. 572. We followed the same rule in Snively v. Colburn, 78 Ill. App. 93, and in Rogers Grain Co. v. Tanton, 136 Ill. App. 533. Appellant contends that this is the only evidence tending to charge appellant with notice of the defective conditions of the wires at said corner, but it will be seen hereafter that we find much evidence which might reasonably tend to charge appellant with notice. It was not error to admit this telephone conversation In answer to this evidence appellant called a young woman, who testified that she was an employe of appellant during the period covered by the evidence of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
186 Ill. App. 379, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trapp-v-rockford-electric-co-illappct-1914.