Kyle v. Southern Electric Light & Power Co.
Kyle v. Southern Electric Light & Power Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The defendant’s employees while engaged in taking down a wooden electric light pole on Federal street in this city, on the 26th of May, 1893, lost control of it, and the result was that it fell upon and seriously injured the plaintiff, who was then but eleven years old. The case in hand relates to this occurrence, and it was brought to enforce the plaintiff’s claim that the negligence of the men intrusted with the work of taking down the pole was the proximate cause of the injury he received. The burden of showing the negligence óf which he complained was on him, and he introduced evidence to prove that the men engaged in taking down the pole failed to exercise the care required by the circumstances and that the appliances used in the performance of the work were inadequate. This evidence was met by evidence introduced by the defendant tending to show the observance of due care by its employees and the use of appliances commonly employed in such work. If the evidence submitted by the plaintiff considered by itself was sufficient to sustain his contention it presented a question which the court, notwithstanding the opposing evidence, was bound to submit to the jury.
The testimony respecting the size and weight of the pole showed that it was thirty-five feet in length and from twelve to fifteen inches in diameter, and that its weight was from twelve to fifteen hundred pounds. There was a decided conflict in the testimony in regard to the number of men engaged in lowering the pole at and immediately before the time it fell. The evidence on the part of the plaintiff showed that there were but three men employed in that most critical and perilous part of the work, and the evidence on the part of the defendant showed that there were eight men, including the foreman, present, and that as many of them were engaged in it as were required for the proper performance of it. There was some evidence in the case from which it might be reasonably inferred that the pole was crooked and that the danger in lowering it
It is believed that the evidence we have summarized required the submission to the jury of the question whether the negligence of the defendant was the cause of the injury the plaintiff received by the falling of the pole. It was the duty of the defendant to furnish sufficient men and adequate appliances for the work of taking down the pole, and it was liable for the consequences of its failure to do so. If it discharged its duty in this respect it was still answerable for the consequences of the negligence of its employees in the performa2ice of the work. Whether it did discharge its duty in the premises, and whether its employees exercised the care required by the circumstances, were questions for the jury under proper instruction from the court.
Two of the specifications of error are based 021 rubmgs upon
The third, fourth, fifth, sixth, tenth, eleventh and twelfth specifications are founded upon quotations from the charge in which the attention of the jury was directed to matters proper for their consideration in passing upon the controlling question in the case. These matters we have already summarized and a detailed reference to them in this connection is not necessary. We discover nothing in the manner in which they were presented or in the comments upon them that can be fairly regarded as objectionable. In the extracts from the charge embraced in the seventh, eighth and ninth specifications the court referred to the butting pike used in taking down the pole as cheaper than another butting pike described by the defendant’s witness as in the form of the letter X, and to the block and tackle as a safer appliance than was used in this case. As it appeared in the testimony of Fitzpatrick that the butting pikes furnished by the defendant saved the cost of an extra man, and in the testimony of Dougherty that the block and tackle method gives the men full control of the pole from the time it starts until it reaches the ground, a reference in the charge to these matters was not improper.
A single sentence from the instructions in regard to damages is the subject of complaint in the thirteenth specification. We have often had occasion to characterize this method of attacking an instruction as unfair to the trial court, and to hold that the general effect of the charge, rather than a casual expression in it, must govern the interpretation or construction of it. Applying this rule to the case in hand the instruction in relation to damages furnishes no substantial ground for reversing the judgment. The jury were fairly limited to compensation for the pain suffered, and it cannot be justly said that there was any
The defendant has no substantial reason to complain of the answer to its fourth point, nor is there any reasonable ground for the claim that the charge as a whole tended to mislead and bias the jury.
The specifications are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- James W. Kyle, by his Next Friend and Mother, Eliza Kyle v. The Southern Electric Light and Power Company
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- • Negligence — Injury by fall of electric light pole — Evidence—Question for jury. ■ In an action to recover damages for personal injuries to a child eleven years old, caused by the fall of an electric light pole, the case is for the jury where the evidence showed that the pole was thirty-five feet in length, and from twelve to fifteen inches in diameter; that its weight was from twelve to fifteen hundred pounds; that the evidence for the plaintiff showed that there were but three men employed in lowering the pole, while the evidence for defendant showed that there were eight engaged in the work; that the pole was crooked, and that this increased the danger in lowering it; that the pole turned while the men were in the act of lowering it, which was one of the causes of their failure to retain control of it; that there were other and safer methods of taking down poles than the one employed, but that they were not usually resorted to in taking down small poles; that the defendant claimed that the falling of the pole was attributable solely to the nature of the ground in which it was set. Practice, C. P. — Charge of court — Assignments of error. The general effect of the charge of the court rather than a casual expression in it must govern the interpretation or construction of it. In an action to recover damages for personal injuries where the court has charged that the damages' should be limited to compensation for the pain suffered, it is not error for the court to say “thereis no rule of law or morals, nothing but your common sense to guide you; and all that the court can do is to admonish the jury to be fair and just as between the parties, and to admonish them that extravagance either in giving too much or giving too little will not be tolerated by the court.”