Wells v. Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co.

198 S.W. 721, 178 Ky. 261, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 700
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 7, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 198 S.W. 721 (Wells v. Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells v. Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co., 198 S.W. 721, 178 Ky. 261, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 700 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Miller

Reversing.

The appellee the Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company operates a telephone line between Bardstown and Bloomfield, in Nelson county, a distance of twelve miles.

In the afternoon of December 8th, 1915, the appellants Wells and Cherry, the plaintiffs below, drove from Bardstown to Bloomfield in a buggy. While on their return trip to Bardstown and at about half past ten o’clock that night, the mare they were driving ran into a sagging wire.of the defendant company’s telephone line, the wire catching the mare under the neck. Wells was thrown from the buggy, and Cherry while trying to get [262]*262out of the buggy was caught between the wheel and the bed of the buggy. Fortunately, however, no bones were broken, and neither party seemed to be seriously hurt.

Wells and Cherry brought separate actions against the company for damages, joining the company’s foreman, Hammond, as a defendant. By agreement the two .cases were tried together before the same jury which returned a verdict for the defendant in each ease, and Wells and Cherry appealed.

A short time before the accident the company had begun to overhaul and increase the capacity of its plant, and had put L. T. Hammond in charge of its work, with a crew of men. The work consisted of straightening poles, pulling corners back, replacing broken insulators with new ones, and repairing the poles and wires wherever it was necessary. In addition to this repair of the old plant the crew put in one complete new circuit consisting of two wires for the purpose of increasing the capacity.

The work was begun at the Bloomfield end of the line and had proceeded to a point just beyond where the accident occurred. The new wires were strung on the same poles and cross arms that carried the old wires. The accident occurred in front of the Briggs place; and going from Bloomfield towards Bardstown there is a bridge to be crossed just before reaching the Briggs place. The telephone line parallels the road on the Briggs side, passes over the bridge, and then crosses the road at right angles. It then runs along the opposite side of the road for perhaps seventy-five yards, and it then again crosses the road at right angles and continues towards Bardstown on the Briggs side of the road. The accident occurred at this second crossing of the road by the wires.

An automobile party consisting of Lander and others left Bardstown for Bloomfield at about ten o’clock the same night, and at the place where the accident subsequently befell Cherry and Wells the Lander party encountered two sagging wires. The first wire hung very low and struck the automobile just below its lamps; the second was higher and grazed the top of the automobile. Neither Hammond nor any other employee of the company knew of the sagging wire until the next morning when Hammond and his crew left Bloomfield to continue their work. They first encountered the high sagging wire near the bridge, but it was not sagging enough to interfere with their wagon. They spliced the wire, took up the slack, and proceeding down the road they soon [263]*263encountered the other wire which had caused the accident to the plaintiffs. They then learned for the first time that one of the old wires in use had broken between the two crossing points, and that the wire had “crept” over on the insulators either way so as to cause the sagging at the two crossing places. .

It is the theory of the plaintiffs that the new wire which crossed the road twice near the Briggs place was put up by Hammond and so insecurely- fastened as to. permit it to sag down over the road and thus cause the injury. It is the theory of the'company, however, that the new wire had nothing to do with the accident, but that the wire that sagged was one of the older circuits already in use. The proof not only fails to show that the new wire was clown but it shows without contradiction that it was an old wire that sagged; that during the night of December 6th, between dark and eleven o’clock one of the older wires in use broke between the two crossing points; and that after the wire broke it “crept” .both ways, causing the wire to sag at both points where it crossed the road, as above narrated.

There was no proof of negligence, or defective construction or of a bad condition, or a need of repair, or that the company had notice of the sagging wire.

Appellants ask a reversal upon the ground that the trial court erred, (1) in refusing to give instruction “A” asked by the plaintiffs, and (2) in giving instruction No. 7. The petition charges the company’s foreman and servants with gross negligence in so changing, removing, and insecurely fastening the wires that they sagged and fell down upon the highway; and that the plaintiffs’ injury was caused by the gross negligence of the company and its servants, particularly Hammond, the foreman, “as hereinbefore set out.”

The case was tried upon two distinct theories-; the plaintiff’s theory being that -the new wire sagged, because it was negligently fastened; the defendant’s theory being that the old wire broke and was the wire that-sagged.

The plaintiffs would make the company liable • for failing to properly fasten and secure the wire, while the company claims exemption from liability upon the ground that there was no proof of the negligence alleged, and further because the uncontradicted evidence shows that the break in one of the older wires was not caused by the company’s negligence.

[264]*264The first instruction put upon the company the duty of exercising ordinary care in the construction and maintenance of its wires, and made the company liable in case it failed to exercise that care. The second instruction gave the measure of damages; the third provided for separate verdicts in case both defendants were not exonerated; and the fourth defined ordinary care.

The fifth, sixth and seventh instructions read as follows :

“5. The court instructs the jury that while it was the duty of the defendant to exercise reasonable care to construct and maintain its telephone wires along and over the highway so as to avoid injury to travelers along said highway, yet, defendant was not an insurer of the safety of such travelers from injury by coming in contact with such wires; and if the jury believes from the evidence that the wire which caused the injury complained of was in a reasonably safe condition prior to the night of the accident, and if there was any defect in the wire which caused it to break, and the same was not known to the defendant or its servants or agents, and could not have been known by the exercise of reasonable diligence, and that the injury to plaintiffs was caused by a condition of sagging of the wire so as to obstruct the highway, and which fact the defendant or its servants or agents did not know of, or could not have discovered by the exercise of reasonable diligence in time to remove the obstructing wire from the highway from the time of the sagging of the wire that caused the injury until the injury occurred, the jury should find for the defendant.”
. “6.

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Related

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177 S.E. 284 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.W. 721, 178 Ky. 261, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-cumberland-telephone-telegraph-co-kyctapp-1917.