Trout v. Laclede Gaslight Co.

132 S.W. 58, 151 Mo. App. 207, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 763
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 132 S.W. 58 (Trout v. Laclede Gaslight 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
Trout v. Laclede Gaslight Co., 132 S.W. 58, 151 Mo. App. 207, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 763 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

NIXON, P. J.

Alexander J. Trout was killed while at work as a lineman in the city of St. Louis on July 26, 1907, on one of appellant’s poles carrying the appellant’s electric wires and on which poles were strung also the wires of the- Bell Telephone Company. This is an action by the widow to recover of the appellant for his death. Respondent obtained judgment for seven thousand dollars from which the defendant has appealed.

The petition charged that the plaintiff’s husband was employed as a lineman by the Bell Telephone Company, which company operated a telephone system in the city of St. Louis; that on July 26, 1907, and long prior to that date, the defendant, Laclede Gas Light Company, and the said Bell Telephone Company maintained their respective systems of wires on the same line of poles, the wires of the telephone company being strung upon cross-arms attached to said poles and immediately above the wires- of defendant, which were likewise attached to the cross-arms of said poles; that defendant’s wires were in such close proximity to the wires of the telephone company, that the linemen of the latter company, while in the discharge of their duties working upon the telephone wires, were liable to come in contact with the defendant’s wires; that defendant’s. wires were heavily charged with electricity of high voltage and dangerous to human life unless they were safely and wholly insulated, which facts were known to the defendant or might have been known by the exercise of ordinary care. The petition further charges that on the date mentioned above, and long prior thereto, “defendant carelessly and negligently failed and omitted to protect one of its wires at said point, near a pole on said line, with safe or sufficient insulating material, and carelessly and negligently [214]*214permitted the covering used thereon to become worn, rotten, defective and wholly insufficient to render it safe to persons required to be thereabout or coming in contact therewith,” and that by reason thereof the deceased husband of plaintiff, while working upon the wires of the telephone company on said pole in the line of his duties, received an electric shock “from said wire then and there thus defectively, insufficiently and unsafely covered and insulated,” thereby immediately causing his death.

The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence.

Plaintiff’s husband was an employee of the Bell Telephone Company and was an experienced lineman of many years’ service. The defendant, Laclede Gas Light Company, had its poles in various parts of the city upon which wires were strung carrying, electricity for lighting purpose^: Besides its own wires, the poles of the defendant also carried the wires of two other companies, The Bell Telephone Company and the Union Electric Light and Power Company. The telephone company had leased from the defendant the cross-arms on which its wires were strung, paying the defendant an annual rental for their use. For purposes of its own, the telephone company desired a new and higher pole for its wires on the corner of Grand and Kossuth avenues. It accordingly obtained permission from the defendant to erect a new pole at that place, the telephone company agreeing to erect the new pole and to transfer all the wires from the old to the new pole at its own expense, the new pole, however, to belong to the defendant. After the telephone company had erected the new pole, it sent its employees, of whom plaintiff’s husband was one, without notice to the defendant, to take the wires down from the old pole and string them on the arms of the new pole, and it was while working on the old pole loosening the wires preparatory to their transfer to the new pole that plain[215]*215tiff’s husband received the shock which caused his death. The wires of the telephone company had a 5U0 volt circuit. The defendant’s wires carried 2300 volts and those of the Union Electric Light and Power Company carried 4500', the wires of both of these latter companies being high tension wires. The telephone company had some ten or twenty wires on this pole, the Union Company two wires and the defendant four wires. The evidence shows that sixty per cent of the Bell Telephone Company’s wires in the city of St. Louis are hung upon poles with wires of high tension, and that in the ordinary and usual discharge of the duties of a lineman working for the Bell Telephone Company, approximately sixty per cent of the time he works is spent on poles on which there are wires of high tension. The evidence further shows that a voltage of 2300 is dangerous to life and that wires carrying such a voltage are always treated as live wires.

The testimony of the defendant’s witness, Wm. Thompson, was that he was the assistant superintendent of construction of the Bell Telephone Company in St. Louis; that he had been engaged in telephone work for twenty-seven years and was a lineman of twelve years’ practical experience himself; that the general custom is to treat all electric light wires as high tension wires and take due precaution to be .safe when handling wires around them.- “The custom is to treat them all as live wires; by that I mean that they treat all electric light as high tension wires or high voltage wires. By being ‘alive’ we mean that the dangerous current is there at all times; by being ‘alive’ we mean dangerous. A live wire is a dangerous wire. Linemen treat them by insulating themselves with rubber gloves and rubber boots. Our men do not wear these gloves all the time working on our wires. It is not a universal custom. It depends upon the conditions under which they are working. ’ ’

[216]*216John P. Regan, inspector of the lighting department of the city of St. Louis, testified for the plaintiff that it was his duty to make inspections of wires and poles, to attend to all kinds of complaints coming from citizens pertaining to wires, and also to visit places of accidents. He stated that high tension wires, even when new, are dangerous, and that contact with such a wire is to be avoided. That there is no insulation known to manufacturers or users of high tension wires which is a complete and absolutely perfect insulation and that, this fact is well known to linemen.

The crew of men with which deceased was working at the time of his death, as stated, was employed by the Bell Telephone Company to transfer the wires from the old pole to the new pole. A wagon accompanied the men, containing, among other things, rubber gloves and rubber boots for the use of the men when in the course of their work they were liable to come in contact with or handle live high tension wire's. The rules of the telephone company required that its employees wear these gloves and boots when engaged in work upon poles carrying high tension wires, and when the occasion required their use. Such an order had been given to deceased when he was holding the position of foreman. The rubber gloves and boots which were furnished had been tested as to their non-conductivity and would withstand a voltage of sixty-six hundred.

Plaintiff’s husband was killed at about four o’clock on the afternoon of July 26, 1907. Immediately after his death, one of the defendant’s wires was found with a bare' spot where the insulation had been abraded, and the wire was exposed. The deceased was working on the pole on which this wire was strung and had been working on it all day. He wore neither rubber gloves nor rubber boots, but did wear, according to some of the witnesses, leather gloves, and he was wearing them a short time before the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
132 S.W. 58, 151 Mo. App. 207, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trout-v-laclede-gaslight-co-moctapp-1910.