Jones v. Postal Telegraph Cable Co.
Jones v. Postal Telegraph Cable Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion' of the Court was delivered by
The main questions' involved in this appeal from a judgment for damages for personal injuries, are: (1) Were the defendants entitled to atn order from the Circuit Judge for the removal of the cause to the Circuit Court of the United States)? (2) Was the Circuit Court without jurisdiction) to hear the action) against the defendant, Postal Telegraph Company, because it was a foreign 'corporation' ? ( 8 ) Should a nonsuit have been ordered on the ground that the plaintiff had undertaken the duty of inspecting the defective pole, by the fall of which, he was injured, and, therefore, was himself responsible for the failure to discover and remedy the defect, or onj the ground that the evidence showed 'beyond dispute that 'he was guilty of contributory negligence in ascending- a pole manifestly unsafe?
The plaintiff thus sets out in the second and third paragraphs of his complaint 'the delicts of the 'defendant and the manner ins which he was injured thereby: “That at the times hereinafter mentioned, and especially during' the year 1904-, and in the spring of said year, the defendant, M. A. Ray, was in the employment of the said Postal Telegraph-Cable Company, as an inspector of the lime generally of said company between the city of Augusta, Georgia, and the city of Charleston, South Carolina, said line passing through: the county of Ailcern .and following' a general direction! from Augusta, Georgia, to Charleston, South Carolina, along the Postal roads going by White Pond, in the county of Aiken, at the point hereinafter referred to, and that it was the habit and custom, and practice of the said' defendant company to use an inspector, such as the defendant, M. A. Ray, with a force of hands and implements used for the1 said purpose, to inspect the line of said telegraph company along the route as aforesaid, and that said M. A. Ray, as such inspector of said company, with a gang of hands, in the early part of the spring of 1904:, inspected said lines, and had with, him such implements' and material whereby he could finally ascertain *277 whether a telegraph pole used for the purpose of suspending the wires used by said company, was sound and all right below the ground to any distance, but that said M. A. Ray, .as inspector of said company for said purposes, notwithstanding' he inspected said line, with said gang of hands, .and could have ascertained whether anything was the matter with the telegraph -pote of said defendant company, herer inafter referred to, negligently failed to inspect the same .and to ascertain whether it was rotten below the surface of •the ground.
‘‘That the plaintiff herein, Joseph A. Jones, some time previous to the 14th day of June, 1904, was' employed by the defendant company as a workman, and that on' said day ■he was employed by said company to go along the line of -poles and wire of said company in the county of Aiken, and State aforesaid, by himself, with a vehicle solely in his ■charge, and with such implements as he had, to find out if .anything was wrong- in- said line and to repair the same. That he proceeded in the performance of his work, and1 that -when he reached a point at a pole of said company situate about a mile and a half west of White Pond, oo the Southern Railway, he noticed that there was a joint of wire that had to be straightened out and changed, and for said purpose he had to' mount said' pole, and that with such -instruments as he had and- which were furnished him by the defendant company, he ascended said pole and attended to his business in connection with the wire, and as he was descending the pole -the same fell to- the ground and hi-S' leg was, caught under said pole and broken above the knee in three- places, and- his hip joint was dislocated and he was wounded and bruised in ■ other parts of his body. -That said pole fell 'because it was íptt-en 'below the ground and unfit for a lineman to climb upupom. That deponent u-sed every care -and caution,- he could in testing said pole with- his pike and otherwise, and1 noticed -nothing -whatsoever a-s to- any defects therein; whereas, -the inspection of the pole afterwards showed that it had been *278 rotten, down in the ground for a long time, which defect could have 'been ascertained by the inspector, Mr. Ray, and his gang oif hands, who passed over the road in- their capacity representing the defendant company not very long before the time of the injury to 'this plaintiff; and this plaintiff alleges and charges that the cause of his1 injury was the negligence of the defendant company and the negligence of its inspector, M. A. Ray, in not ascertaining that' said pole was rotten so that it was: ai menace toi life and limb, and in not having the same removed and a new pole replaced., or old pole reset.”
■The effort to: prove that Ray was a nonresident failed, for i't -appears, from the- affidavits -that bis family residence was-in- the city of Florence, and that his business- was entirely in this State.
*279 The position that the complaint does not allege a joint liability of the Postal Telegraph Company and Ray is also untenable. The allegation is -that the Postal Telegraph Company, failed in its duty to the plaintiff in allowing a defective' pole to remain on. its line, which plaintiff’s, duty required him. to climb, and that this failure toi supply a safe place to work was due to. the joint delict :of the telegraph company and Ray in failing toi make a reasonably careful inspection of the pole. The telegraph company, it is true, could not delegate its duty of supplying a reasonably safe place to work to its -employee, Ray, so as. to relieve itself of that duty; but it does not follow that Ray was not individually liable for injury resulting to his fellow servant from any failure on his part to make a reasonably careful inspection. The telegraph company owed the duty to the plaintiff to use reasonable care in inspecting its poles, so as to supply its servants with a safe place to work, and the defendant, Ray, owed his fellow servants the. duty of protecting them from injury by making a reasonably careful inspection. The failure to malee a reasonably careful inspection1 would be, therefore, a breadhi of duty of both1 defendants for which they would be jointly liable. Able v. Southern Ry., 73 S. C. 173, 52 S. E. 962; Barber v. Southern Ry., 76 S. C. 4, 56 S. E. 540; Garter v. Atlantic C. L. Ry., 84 S. C. 546, 66 S. E. 997; Chesapeake etc. Ry. v. Dixon, 179 U. S. 131, 45 L. Ed. 123; Thompson v. Ala. G. S. Railway Co., 200 U. S. 206, 50 L. Ed. 441; Ill. Cen. Ry. v. Shoegog, 215 U. S. 308, 54 L. Ed. 208; Chicago Ry. Co. v. Willard, 220 U. S. 426, 55 L. Ed. 521.
The evidence in this case shows that on1 the line between Augusta. Georgia, and Charleston, South 'Carolina, the defendant company had two -systems o-f inspection and repair. The defendant, M. A. Ray, as -foreman, with a force1 of men equipped with all necessary implements, was charged with the duty of traveling- along the line and discovering and repairing all defects in poles and wires so- as to keep the line safe and efficient. The second method or system was that in; which -the plaintiff was employed. He was required to go along the lines -alone in a conveyance, and his duty, as he describes it, was that of “keeping up the lines, clearing away -the undergrowth, replacing bad joints, or any other work I could do on the lines-.” A rule of the company contained this admonition: “Linemen are especially cautioned: to ascertain before climbing -a pole, whether it is safe, by inspecting its condition ('both above and below the ground) and its- guying and bracing.” This evidence admits- of no other inference than itbat the plaintiff had assumed such- duties- in keeping the line- in repair that he was bound to use reasonable ca're in examining a pole before ascending it. ■ He- thus- describes -his precautions and the work he undertook to- do: “I tied my te’am by the road and I got -out and taken; my pike pole and tested a pole on the corner, which was leaning- towards the woods-. Wires on that pole were very -slack. I dug around the pole with a shovel and examined it as 'best I could without digging it entirely up. I dug about a foot and a 'half from the top of the ground. I -went down about a foot and- a half below the solid ground and I tried to break it, then I tried to cut into it with a shovel and it seemed to be perfectly sound.
“How did you test it with your pike? Sticking the pike in the pole and tried to 'break it with my strength, and then I tested it with- a shovel. I put in an anchor on- the road *282 side, in order to make sure—the wires ora each side of the pole had some 'bad joints ini them:. There was two. In order to. take out the joints and put ira a good piece of wire, I let the wires down off the pole to the ground with a grab line, that is a rope. After the wires1 were let down I started to come down,”
AV-e shall not discuss in detail the- numerous exceptions to the charge on the questions of contributory negligence and assumption of risk, since all of them obviously hinge on the law as we have endeavored- to state it, 'and the charge of the Circuit Judge was- in accordance with our view of the law.
The Circuit Judge charged the jury- that they were to decide, as issues arising out of 'the -evidence', whether the plaintiff had notice of the rule requiring linemen to- examine poles before ascending them, and whether the plaintiff bad assumed any d-uty of inspecting the poles as well as the w-ires. The defendant complains' of this charge ¡because the -evidence admitted of no other inference than that the plaintiff did have notice of the rule, and that it was his duty to- inspect the poles. Inasmuch, as the -plaintiff expressly admitted that he was familiar with the rule, and that it was his duty to inspect the pole before ascending -i-t, and thait be did inspect it, it is impossible that the jury co-uld have found otherwise.
The other -exceptions to the charge impute- errors which reference to the context will show so- clearly were not committed that particular discussion of them is not necessary.
It is the judgment of this. Court that the judgment of th-e Circuit Court he affirmed.
Reference
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- 1. Removal of Causes—Joist Touts.—Refusal to remove case into Federal Court on ground' of diverse citizenship and 'because the complaint does not allege a joint liability sustained, for the reason that the affidavits show the family of one of the defendants resides in this State, and his business is entirely within the State, and the failure of an inspector of telegraph poles to detect and remove a defective pole makes a joint tort between the inspector and the telegraph company for. an injury caused-to an employee by reason of the defective pole. 3. Jurisdiction—Waiver.—Where two defendants, one a foreign corporation and the other an individual, resident of another county than the one in which the suit is brought, answer the complaint on the ■merits without reservation1, they waive the objection to the jurisdiction of the person. 3. Assumption of Risks—-Issues.—-Where a telegraph company has two systems of pole inspection—one by a gang with full equipments to fully test—the other by rule requiring the employee to test before climbing—whether the lineman assumed the entire risk in climbing a pole apparently safe -after inspection is a question that depends on the rules1 and practices of the master and the circumstances of each case, and is usually for the jury. 4. Telegraph -Companies—‘Lineman—Contributory Negligence.—In view of all the evidence in this case the 'Court cannot say -as matter of law that the lineman- was guilty of contributory negligence in climbing- a defective pole.