Judges: Parker
Filed Date: 3/11/1903
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
If the fact that the plaintiff is a widow, suffering under this distressing accident, were sufficient to establish a cause of action against this defendant, then this verdict might be sustained; but, inasmuch as it was necessary for her to show that such accident resulted from some negligent act or omission of the defendant, and without any contributory negligence on her husband’s part, she has utterly failed to establish any claim whatever against it. The deceased was an employe of the defendant, working as a “lineman,” so called. He assisted it in constructing its lines, and it was a part of his duties to dig holes, set up poles, and string wires upon them. At the time of the accident he was at work constructing a line for the defendant in the village of Antwerp, and most of it seems to have been built by stringing its wires upon the poles of another company then operating in such village. One pole, however, it appears from the evidence, was not safe to be permitted to stand, and it was arranged between the manager of the Antwerp company and the deceased and one Jennings, who was working for the defendant with him, that they would erect a new pole on the opposite side of the street from the unsafe one, and then move all the wires thereon to the new pole. This new pole was set up a day or two before the a'ccident, Leach, Jennings, and others doing the work. Before that was done the unsafe pole was examined, and there cannot be the slightest doubt from the evidence but that Leach saw its exact condition, and knew as much about the dangers attending its removal as any one could ascertain. It stood in made ground, and on a slanting bank, from which the earth on the east side had been washed away nearly to the foot of the pole. It was supported by the wires strung upon it and by a guy that extended from the upper end westerly over onto the shop of one Dixon. On the afternoon of July yth Jennings left Antwerp for Watertown, where they lived, intending to return the next day. Walker, another lineman, came the next morning early to assist Leach in transferring the wires from the old to the new pole. On the morning of the 8th they both began that work, and Leach went up to the top of the pole and cut the guy wire above referred to. The strain of the other wireb was all towards the east, a fact which was plain, to be seen by a lineman, and as soon as the support of that guy was taken away the pole fell over towards the east, falling as far as the buildings, or wires which were still strung upon it, would allow, and Leach was thrown off and killed. The hold which the foot of the pole had in the earth was not sufficient to support it. Leach was in charge of the work that morning. No one at. that time gave him any instructions to cut that .wire, and no one — neither Jennings nor any-one1 else — had ever given
The judgment and order must be reversed.
Judgment and order reversed, and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event. All concur.