New Omaha Thomson-Houston Electric Light Co. v. Rombold
New Omaha Thomson-Houston Electric Light Co. v. Rombold
Opinion of the Court
On the 12th day of June, 1899, Johnerson O. Rombold, plaintiff in the court below, filed his petition in the district court for Douglas county, against the defendant electric light company, alleging, in substance, that on March 22, 1898, he entered the employ of the defendant company as a lineman in the city of Omaha, it being his duty under the direction of the defendant to erect poles and string wires in the streets of said city, and that he continued in such employ up to and including a part of July 1, 1898, or a period of a little more than three months. He further alleged that at about five o’clock P. M. on said July first, he and his fellow workmen were engaged in stringing wires on poles and cross-arms at Jones street, between 4th and 5th streets in said city; that in the course of his employment he was directed by defendant to climb a certain pole to a height of about 45 feet, and string a wire upon the top cross-arm; that on this pole there were eight cross-arms, about 20 inches apart, and on each cross-arm from four to six electric and telephone wires 16 inches apart, about 28 of the wires being insulated electric light wires; that on the second cross-arm from the top, the first and second wires on the north side of the pole were insulated and carried a heavy current of electricity; that each of these wires were spliced at a point about two feet west of the cross-arms, the insulation being removed and the wires twisted together, the bare ends of the wires being allowed to extend out about an inch from the main wire; that the sulices were negligently made, in that there was a failure to cover them with insulating material or “taping,” to protect employees and others from coming in contact with such exposed wires; that plaintiff climbed up this pole on the east side of the cross-arm, strung the wire at the north end of the top cross-arm and descended to the west side of the cross-arms between the first and second wires; that when his feet were on the fourth cross-arm from the top
The defendant for its amended answer at the last trial of the cause in the court below denied specifically that it was its duty to insulate the wire complained of in the petition. Defendant- also specifically alleged that the defects complained of were open and obvious and that the plaintiff assumed the risk, by virtue of his employment, of injuries from contact with them. That the defects could have been seen by plaintiff by the exercise of ordinary care, and that he was guilty of contributory negligence in failing- to avoid them. The answer also alleged that on the 12th day of.October, 1898, the plaintiff signed a release and received from defendant $325 in full satisfaction and discharge of the claim set forth in the petition. The release pleaded in the answer was as follows:
“Received of New Omaha Thomson-Houston Electric Light Co., this 12th day of October, 1898, the sum of three hundred and twenty-five dollars, in full satisfaction and discharge of all claims accrued or to accrue in respect of all injurious results, direct or indirect, arising or to arise from an accident sustained* by me on or about the first day of July, 1898, while in the employment of the above. $325. J. C. Rombold.
“Witness, W. F. White,
“Address, Omaha, Neb.”
The plaintiff replied, denying the allegations of the amended answer, except as alleged in the petition, and alleged that he was induced to sign the release by fraud
At the outset of this discussion we are confronted with a contest between the able counsel for plaintiff and defendant as to what, if any, questions noAV involved in this controversy have been passed upon by this court in our former opinions, so as to be governed by the “rule of the law of the case.” It is contended by counsel for the
Nor do we see anything in the testimony of the new witness Holdrege, an electric engineer and present manager of defendant company, offered at the last trial, to make a material change in the evidence. We have carefully examined this new evidence and the witness appears to have been fair and impartial in his testimony. He knew nothing about the accident, was at the time it occurred, according to his testimony, working as lineman for a telephone company in Chicago; he has only been connected with defendant company since the first of the year as he states. He never worked as a lineman for an electric light company and admits that the wires of an electric light company are charged with a much higher and more dangerous current of/electricity than those of a telephone company; that the necessity of insulation is much greater on electric light wires than on telephone wires. He also testifies from his knowledge of the business that it is the duty of an electric light company to insulate its wires, and that when a service wire, as is conceded to have been the fact in this case, has been disconnected, the splices should be immediately taped and insulated by the lineman who disconnects the wire. lie also testifies that no lineman is permitted to tap the wires of an electric light com
In our former opinion on this case we held in brief that it was not error to submit to the jury whether the defendant company had taken reasonable care to provide a safe place for plaintiff to work under all the facts and circumstances surrounding the controversy; and also that whether due care was used by plaintiff in avoiding the injury was a question for the jury; that whether plaintiff had assumed the risk was also a question for the jury, and whether or not the alleged receipt had been procured from plaintiff by fraud and misrepresentations was likewise a question for the determination of the jury. In our subsequent opinion in 68 Neb. 71, we held that one of the issues of fact in this case is whether it was the duty of the defendant to protect the plaintiff from the defects in question, or whether that duty devolved upon plaintiff, and that it was error under the evidence to instruct as a matter of law that this duty devolved upon the defendant, and because the eighth paragraph of instructions declared
It is urged strongly by counsel for the electric light company that in any view the former decision of this court in holding that the question of defendant’s negligence, in not insulating the untaped splices, was one of fact to be determined by the jury, was erroneous, because the evidence establishes by a clear preponderance that the duty of discovering and insulating these splices devolved upon plaintiff, and not upon defendant under plaintiff’s contract of service. We have made a further examination of the evidence contained in the present record without regard to our former holdings, and are fully satisfied from such investigation that the testimony is fairly conflicting on this question. According to plaintiff’s theory, supported by his own testimony and that of other linemen who testified in his behalf, it is only the duty of a lineman to look for and repair defective wires when directed to do so. While it is conceded by plaintiff that when directed to insulate and repair defective wires it is his duty to do so, yet he contends that it is only his duty when doing construction work to protect himself against obvious dangers. He concedes that if he had been sent to look for these uninsulated splices he would have been able to have discovered them, but that having been directed to ascend the pole for the purpose of stringing wires on the top thereof, his duty was to obey this order and climb as it was necessary to do to the first cross-arm and ascend from there on the cross-arms with care and caution between the double row of wires which fenced him in on either side until he reached the top of the pole; that when he reached the top. of the pole and fixed the wire, which he was stringing, in its proper place, it was necessary to descend on the west side of the cross-arms; that he looked down before beginning his descent to see that the way was
Again the questions involved in this issue were submitted to the jury for special findings by request of counsel for the electric light company on the following interrogatories :
“3. Were the untaped splices on the wires between which Rombold started to descend the pole obvious and of such character as to be open to the usual view of a lineman in Rombold’s situation on the pole? A. No.”
“4. Did Rombold, when he was on the pole from which he fell, look at the wires to see whether he might safely pass between the wires strung on the pole? ‘A. Yes.”
“5. Could Rombold by looking to see whether there were any bare places or defective insulation on the wires between which he started to descend have avoided the electric shock which caused him to fall to the ground? A. No.”
“6. Was it the duty of linemen in Rombold’s situation to observe and repair or report to the foreman for repair defects in the insulation of the wires which rendered the condition of the wires unsafe for the linemen? A. No.”
We are also strongly urged to reexamine the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to impeach the receipt signed by plaintiff in settlement of his injuries. The evidence on this question is practically the same as that examined by us in our first opinion, but waiving this for the sake of the conclusions to be reached, we have reexamined the testimony on this issue. According to plaintiff’s testimony, on two occasions shortly before the paper was signed, superintendent White had conversed with him and told him that the company had insurance on its employees; that under their contract with the insurance company this company would pay for hospital expenses
It is also urged that the trial court erred in admitting evidence as to the conversation with superintendent White preceding the signing of the receipt. This contention, however, is not Avell founded, as it is a universal rule that when fraud is alleged a broad and liberal latitude should be given the party alleging it in establishing every fact and circumstance connected with its alleged .perpetration. The mental and physical condition of the party, all representations and inducements held out to him by the adverse party, should be carefully examined into, and all testimony directly connected with the transaction should be admitted. While it is the general rule that the signing of an agreement by one who can read and write without reading it, is ordinarily such a negligent act on the part of the one so bound as to deny him relief from the written contract, Osborne v. Missouri P. R. Co., 71 Neb. 180, this rule has-many exceptions, especially when the contest is between the original parties to the agreement and the signature is alleged to have been procured by fraud or deception. These exceptions are fully recognized in the case just cited, and the question involved in the instant case is referred to in this opinion in the following language:
“In the very recent case of New Omaha Thomson-Houston Electric Light Co. v. Rombold, 68 Neb. 54, the plaintiff was permitted to be relieved from his signature to a release similar in substance to that pleaded in the suit at*271 bar, by a clear preponderance of the evidence that the receipt had been misread to him when his signature was obtained. While the judgment first rendered in this case was reversed on a rehearing on January 6, 1901, this portion of the opinion was not reversed, and is still of judicial weight in the determination of this question. But in this case, the agent of defendant purported to read the written instrument to the plaintiff, and procured his signature by deception in misreading the contents of the paper signed.”
The instructions given by the trial court are assailed generally in the brief of the electric light company. The instructions on the alleged fraud perpetrated on plaintiff in procuring his signature to the release are identical Avith the one commented upon with favor in our first opinion, and need no further review. The other instructions covered carefully every defense interposed, and tell the jury again and again that if they believe from the evidence either that plaintiff had assumed the risk as an incident of his employment, or that the defect Avas open and obvious, in either instance they should find for the defendant, and in no instruction given Avas plaintiff permitted to recover if he had voluntarily signed the receipt without any deceit or fraud having been practiced upon him, or if it Avas his duty to inspect the wires for defects at the time of the injury or if the defect Avas open and obvious. They further tell the jury to not alloAv plaintiff, if permitted to recover, anything for medical services and hospital expenses. We think the instructions models of clearness and precision, Avhich clearly covered OArery question involved in the controversy. Finding no reversible error in the record, it is therefore recommended that the judgment of the district court be affirmed.
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
070rehearing
The following opinion on motion for rehearing was filed December 20, 1905. Rehearing denied:
This cause is now pending on its second appearance in this court. The error proceedings first taken to have reviewed the record and judgment obtained in the court belotv resulted in a reversal of the judgment and a remanding of the cause for further proceeding. New Omaha Thomson-Houston Electric Light Co. v. Rombold, 68 Neb. 54, 68 Neb. 71. The plaintiff on. the second trial in the court below again obtained judgment, and defendant brings error. In an opinion prepared by the commissioners, Avhich was adopted by the court, it Avas found that no prejudicial error had been committed and the judgment last obtained Avas accordingly affirmed. New Omaha Thomson-Houston Electric Light Co. v. Rombold, ante, p. 259. An application for a rehearing; has been made and it is complained that the rule of the “law of the case”
One of the principal defenses of the company was and is that it owed no duty to the plaintiff in respect of the alleged negligent construction and defective condition of its wires which produced the injury, since the character and nature of the plaintiff’s employment required of bim the duty of inspecting the wires of its lines where he was working and of discovering defects and repairing the same or reporting such defects to the company in order that the same might by it be properly repaired and the defect cured.
As bearing on the issue of the alleged negligence of the company and its duty toAvard its employees in that regard, the trial court at the first hearing instructed the jury, in substance, that it was the defendant’s duty to exercise ordinary and reasonable care to render it safe for the plaintiff to work on its poles and among its Avires strung thereon. That if such degree of care and caution required such wires to be insulated, then it was negligence to permit such wires or parts of them to be without proper insula
If the evidence relating to corresponding duties and obligations of the respective parties concerning the defective condition of the wires is in the last trial substantially the same as on the first, as we think it is, then the propriety of the submission of the question to the jury for its determination as to on whom the duty rested, is foreclosed by the rule of the law of the case.
It is contended that there is no averment in the pleading of the plaintiff that the defendant had actual knowledge of the defect complained of, and that there would be no cause of action unless the defendant might by reasonable inspection have obtained such knowledge. The facts out of which the alleged negligence arises do not, as it occurs to us, bring the case within the rule nor the reason of the rule invoked by the defendant. If the defect existed as complained of, it was occasioned by the active agency of the master in the construction and operation of its electrical lighting and power system. It resulted from the negligent acts of its agents and servants in stringing its wires to be used in the prosecution of its business. There would bé no difference in principle had its wires, poles or fastenings been defectively arranged or constructed in the original construction of the plant and regarding which the master would be chargeable; with notice. It would, by the application of like principles, be chargeable with notice of the defective character of the work
There is no serious dispute or conflict in the testimony as to the nature and character of the defects relied on as constituting negligence. The alleged negligence was with reference to the untaped splices of wire left on the main wires where the service wires were detached therefrom. The facts and circumstances as to the size and length of
The judgment of affirmance is adhered to, and the motion for a rehearing denied.
Rehearing denied.
Reference
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- New Omaha Thomson-Houston Electric Light Company v. Johnerson C. Rombold
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