Berley v. Western Union Tel. Co.
Berley v. Western Union Tel. Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff recovered judgment against defendant for $1,000 in this action for damages for personal injuries resulting from the falling of a defective pole which cast him to the ground while employed as a lineman on one of defendant’s telegraph lines near Martins-ville, Va.
The act of negligence alleged in the complaint is that the defendant failed to provide plaintiff a. safe place to work, “the said pole on which he was required to work being de *362 cayed and incapable of sustaining the weight of a man working thereon.”
Defendant, in addition to a general denial, pleaded assumption of risk and contributory negligence.
Plaintiff was engaged with a gang of employees of defendant under the direction of M. Y. Lemmond, foreman, in stringing an additional wire on defendant’s telegraph line between Deakville Station, Va., and Stewart, Va., and at the time of the accident, had gone over a distance of about twenty-eight miles of said line. On the day of the accident and for several days previous thereto, it was plaintiff’s duty to climb poles, nail on brackets and fasten the wire thereto, after it had been pulled tight by two men on the ground at the next pole with a block and tackle. On this occasion plaintiff climbed the pole carrying up with him the bracket and wire, nailed on the bracket, laid the wire thereon loosely and descended to the ground while the other employees were waiting for water, and when they were ready to pull the wire tight by means of the block and tackle, he went back up the pole for the purpose of fastening the wire. When he was near the top of the pole, while the wire was being stretched, the pole broke off at or near the ground and he was precipitated therefrom into the railroad cut falling on the crossties, sustaining the injuries complained of.
At the close of plaintiff’s testimony, a motion for non-suit was made on the grounds, (1) that the evidence conclusively showed that the injury was not the proximate result of any negligence of defendant but of the acts of fellow servants or the acts of plaintiff and fellow servants combined; (2) that the injury was within the risks of employ1ment assumed by plaintiff. After verdict, a motion for new trial was made on the grounds (1) that the injuries were due to the acts and negligence of fellow servants; (2) that the injuries were not the result of any act of negligence *363 alleged in the complaint. The motions were overruled and the first and second exceptions assign error.
The specific act of negligence alleged — a defective pole, incapable of sustaining the weight of a man working thereon, was sufficient to cover the case made by the testimony, which was a defective pole which broke while plaintiff was working thereon in the line of his employment, while the wire was being stretched in the usual way. It is argued that the pole was shown to be sufficient to sustain the weight of plaintiff while going up and down it and placing the bracket thereon, and that- it was not plaintiff’s duty to remain on the pole during the process of stretching the wire, but there was testimony that it was the duty of plaintiff to be on the pole to guide the wire while being stretched and to fasten it when sufficiently taut.
The request was properly refused because it was faulty in denying plaintiff a right to recover should the jury take the view that the pole was so defective that it broke while the fellow servants were stretching the wire with due care, or should the jury take the view that the injury was the result of the combined negligence of the master and fellow servants. The law was correctly given to the jury in charging defendant’s tenth request as follows:
“If you find from the testimony that at the time of the accident and alleged injuries, the plaintiff, Samuel Berley, was one of a gang engaged in repairing the line of defendant and in stringing an additional wire along said line, and that the pole he was clmbing fell by reason of the strain put upon it by the other members of said gang stretching a wire attached to said pole, and that plaintiff was negligent in remaining upon said pole, while said wire was being stretched, or the other members of said gang were negligent in stretching said wire while plaintiff was upon said pole, in either event the plaintff cannot recover, if such negligence contributed to his injury as a proximate cause thereof.”
The fifth and sixth exceptions allege error in modifying defendant’s first request to charge, which was as follows:
“The general rule resulting from considerations of justice and policy is that he who engages in the employment of another for the performance of specified duties and services for compensation takes upon himself the natural and ordinary risks and perils incident to the performance of such services, not only so far as they were known to him, but also so far as they could have been known to him by the exercise of ordinary care upon his part; and if you believe from the evidence that whatever injuries the plaintiff sustained were the result of such a risk or peril, the plaintiff cannot recover, and your verdict must be for the defendant.”
Responding to the request the Court said: “That is a true proposition of law; in other words, that the servant assumes all the risks that are necessarily incident to the employment — that is, he assumes the danger ordinarily incident to climbing a pole; but I take it that would be one of the dangers incident to climbing a sound pole. * * * So with a pole, the master is called upon to furnish; if he furnishes a pole upon which he desires his wires to be strung, and he furnishes a pole not strong enough to sup *367 port, not only the weight of the servant while engaged in employment, but whatever was necessary to enable him to properly perform his duty, and it breaks under those circumstances, without negligence on the part of the servant, the master would be liable.”
The contention is the first modification precluded the jury from considering whether or not* the falling of decayed poles was one of the risks assumed by plaintiff under his employment in so far as said risks were known or could have been known by the exercise of ordinary care on his part. This objection cannot be sustained. The Court especially covered this point by instructing the jury in accordance with defendant’s second, sixth and seventh requests.
It is further contended that the second modification was erroneous, as the complaint only alleged that the pole on which the plaintiff was required to work was decayed and incapable of supporting the weight of a man working thereon, and there was no testimony tending to show that it was necessary for plaintiff to remain upon the pole while the wires were being stretched. This objection is not well taken. We have already stated that there was testimony tending to show that it was usual and proper for plaintiff to be upon the pole while the wire was being stretched for the purpose of guiding and fastening the wire.
The remaining exception presents no material matter not considered and disposed of already.
The exceptions are overruled and the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Reference
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- 1. Master and Servant — -Negligence—Telegraph Companies. — That a lineman climbed a telegraph pole, worked on it, descended and went up again and while his fellow-servants were stretching a wire on it in the ordinary way, it being his duty to be on the pole to guide and fasten the wire, the pole fell, and was found to be worm-eaten and rotten at the ground, do not show conclusively that the injury was caused by the acts or negligence of plaintiff’s fellow-servants and that the defective pole was not the proximate cause of the injury. 2. Ibid. — Ibid.—Ibid.—Issues.—That a lineman before climbing a pole looked at it and pushed it raises an issue for the jury whether he negligently breached a rule of the company requiring that poles must not be climbed without being tested, and if weak, assistance must be called to hold them; also, the issues of assumption of risks and contributory negligence. 3. Ibid. — Ibid.—Request to charge in effect, if the pole fell by reason of other employees pulling a wire, the accident was caused by tin negligence of fellow-servants, is faulty in that it denies plaintiff’s right to recover if the pole was defective, or if the injury was the result of the combined negligence of fellow-servants and the master. 4. Ibid. — Charge.—Where there is no issue requiring more particular statement, it is not error to instruct jury it is duty of master to inform servant of hidden dangers in the place or machinery without adding the qualification, if such hidden dangers are known to the master, or could have been known by exercise of ordinary care.