Woodward v. City of Taunton
Woodward v. City of Taunton
Opinion of the Court
This case is before us on an exception to an order directing a verdict for the defendant on the plaintiff’s evidence.
The plaintiff was an employee of a telephone company. He was sent to lower a messenger wire supporting a telephone cable which ran across Broadway to the City Hotel in Taunton. At that time the poles of the defendant were set in the sidewalk on the opposite side of the street from the City Hotel and on these poles was strung among others an electric light wire belonging to and maintained by the defendant. This electric light wire was a wire of high voltage used for commercial purposes. The telephone wire was set up before the electric light wire was strung. The electric light wire was strung across and above the telephone wire.
The plaintiff’s story is that he had driven a new bolt into the building to which his company’s telephone wire was attached, about a foot lower than the old bolt to which that wire was then attached. He then proceeded to remove the telephone wire from the old bolt in order to attach it to the new one. Just what the plaintiff then did is not very clearly stated in the bill of exceptions. As we understand it, he twisted a piece of wire some three feet long around'the messenger wire, “to lengthen it” ;
One McCray who went up to the place where the plaintiff was when the accident happened, testified that when he got there he found this messenger wire and the defendant city’s electric light wire in contact. He also testified that he was on the roof at “ about half past seven.” The plaintiff’s testimony was that he began his work at seven. This witness found the three-foot piece of wire, one end of which the plaintiff twisted around the messenger wire, hanging loose. He fastened that to the new toe bolt, “ threw off the comealongs,” and then “ cut the messenger wire,” by which we understand that he cut the fastening by which the messenger wire was attached to the old bolt. The wire did not then fall, but “ was held in a crease in the brick wall ” ; he loosened it with a stick and the job was done. He also testified “ that while the messenger wire was held in the crease of the brick wall it was still in contact with the defendant’s electric light wire.”
The plaintiff’s testimony was that when he was on the roof the two wires were four or five inches apart, and “ that the wires were moving a little ” at that time; “that there was a little wind that morning, — a slight breeze ” ; that “ he had not pulled on the comealong before he was hurt ” ; that he was ” positive that he did not pull the messenger wire up there and that he didn’t put any strain on the comealong.”
The plaintiff also put in the testimony of three witnesses who had seen the two wires flickering and sparking the night before the accident and once or twice in the week before the accident.
Lastly it appeared that the plaintiff had been in the defendant’s employ for three years. During the first eight months he was a night operator, did inside work and went out “ as a ground man who sends things up to the man on the pole.” Then for a year he did outside work; and finally, in April, 1905, he began climbing poles and from then on to August 7,1906, the date of the accident, “ he did all of the lineman’s work ” ; “ he was known as a combination man and that is a man who puts [in] inside work and does outside construction.” Although at times in his examination the plaintiff undertook to minimize his knowledge, taking it as a whole he must be taken to have been an experienced workman.
McCray testified that he found in the insulation of the under part of the defendant’s electric light wire a hole the size of the defendant’s messenger wire.
The jury could have found that the defendant was negligent in the insulation of its electric light wire and in the stringing of it. It strung the light wire so near the telephone wire which had been previously put up, that the defendant’s light wire had sagged down on to the telephone wire or had been blown on to it by the wind; and the insulation was poor. Illingsworth v. Boston Electric Light Co. 161 Mass. 583.
The case at bar differs from Illingsworth v. Boston Electric Light Co. 161 Mass. 583, Barker v. Boston Electric Light Co. 178 Mass. 503, Linton v. Weymouth Light & Power Co. 188 Mass. 276, and Mahan v. Newton & Boston Street Railway, 189 Mass. 1, because the plaintiff in the case at bar was sent out to remedy the very thing which caused the accident.
The entry must be
Exceptions overruled.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.