Brush Electric Light & Power Co. v. Wells

35 S.E. 365, 110 Ga. 192, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 345
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 3, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 35 S.E. 365 (Brush Electric Light & Power Co. v. Wells) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brush Electric Light & Power Co. v. Wells, 35 S.E. 365, 110 Ga. 192, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 345 (Ga. 1900).

Opinion

Fish, J.

Rebecca Wells sued the Brush Electric Light and Power Company, a corporation doing business in the city of Savannah, for damages for the homicide of her husband, Mar-low Wells. The material parts of her petition were, in substance, as follows: Her husband was a lineman in the employ of the defendant company, and, in pursuance of his duty, had 0cliuibed one of its poles for the purpose of repairing or changing the wires of the company strung thereon. In order to do the work it became necessary to cut two of the wires. “He had succeeded in cutting one of the said wires, severing it just above the insulator, leaving a small piece or point projecting therefrom. In passing his right arm around the pole to cut the other wire at the same point, he rested his right arm, between the elbow and armpit, on this projecting wire, and in some manner his arm, shoulder, or other hand came in contact with the hanging wire which he had just severed. ' When, therefore, he seized the second wire with his nippers to cut it, he received through his body the powerful voltage from said company’s wire, which caused his death.” He had been sent by the company to do this particular work, and it knew, at the time a current of electricity was turned on, that he was at work on the ■wires, or might have known it by the exercise of proper care and diligence. He had no reason to believe that the current of electricity would be turned on at that time. . It was turned on suddenly and without his knowledge, just as he was engaged in cutting the wires. Her husband was free from fault, etc.

The evidence upon the trial showed that Marlow Wells, who [194]*194was an experienced lineman, was killed by an electric shock which he received from the wires of the defendant company, while engaged in work upon them as stated in the petition. The evidence further disclosed the fact that it was the duty of the engineer at the power house to turn on the electric current, and that a rule of the company required him, five minutes before turning it on, to give three blasts of a whistle, one short and two long blasts, as a signal or warning to the linemen that the current would be turned on; that the whistle was a peculiar one, unlike any other in the city, and that it could bo heard throughout the entire city and even beyond its limits; that the engineer had been in the service of the company, as engineer, for seven years; that it was customary, at the time Of year when the accident happened, to turn on the current, for the purpose of lighting the city, about six o’clock, p. m., but that on the occasion of this accident it was turned on between three and four o’clock in the afternoon; that the current was sometimes turned on at other times during the day, for various purposes ; that after the whistle had blown the linemen either quit work on the wires or handled them as live wires. Green, one of the plaintiff’s witnesses, testified as follows: “I know why the current was turned on the day Wells was killed. There was a loop that was in trouble the night before, and they could not light the southern part of the city. The. next morning Mr. Keck, the superintendent of the electric light and power company, sent me out to look for the trouble, and I found it at Duffy and Price streets, where there was a box burnt out. I told Mr. Keck, and he told me to go back over the balance of it and see that it was perfectly clear, and they would try it before night. I went hack and put this box in, and reported it to Mr. Keck about one o’clock, and he sent me to put up a transformer at the corner of South Broad and West Broad streets, and T went and put that up and connected the wires. The current was turned on to test that loop, to try that loop and see if it was right before night. It was not turned on to light the city. The test' was made in the afternoon between three and four o’clock. The current is never turned on, on fair days, until about an hour before sunset,” and “the day that Wells was [195]*195killed was a fair day.” The evidence in behalf of the plaintiff tended to show that the whistle was not blown before the current that killed Wells was turned on; while that for the defendant •conduced to show that the whistle was blown on that occasion, as the rule of the company required. There was evidence of the value of the life of the decedent. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and upon defendant’s motion for a new trial being overruled it excepted.

Counsel for the defendant in error contended that the testimony of the witness Green, which is quoted above, showed that the current that killed Marlow Wells was turned on by Keck, the superintendent .of the defendant company. It is obvious, however, that no such inference can be-fairly drawn from Green’s testimony. It merely showed that Keck, the superintendent, said that a test was to be made before night, but there was nothing from which it could be legitimately inferred that such test would not be made by the engineer turning on the current, as it was his duty to do, and under the usual mile. The engineer testified positively that he turned on the current which killed Wells, and there was no evidence to the contrary. We shall, therefore, consider the case from the standpoint that the engineer turned on the current. There is grave doubt as to whether or not the evidence was sufficient to authorize the jury to find that the engineer did not blow the whistle before he turned on the current from which Wells received the shock which resulted in his death. But granting that the engineer neglected to give the required signal upon that occasion, and that his failure to do so caused Wells’s death, was the defendant, under the law, liable for his homicide ? In other words, would the rule as to fellow-servants, as stated in section 2610 of the Civil Code, •apply? viz., that the master, except in case of railroad com-panies, is not liable to one servant for injuries arising from the negligence or misconduct of other servants about the same business. Counsel for defendant in error contended that the facts of this case did not bring it within such rule, for the reason that the respective duties of the engineer and the lineman, Wells, were performed in different departments of the company’s business, so that there was no opportunity for the exer[196]*196tion of a mutual influence upon each other’s carefulness; and the case of Cooper v. Mullins, 30 Ca. 146, was relied on to support such contention. It will clearly appear from an examination of that case that what the learned judge who delivered the opinion of the court said upon the subject of the foundation o£ the above-stated rule was merely obiter, as the question of fellow-servants was not involved in the case; for in the latter part of the opinion he said: “But it is not even true thát the two employees in this case were servants of the same master. . One of the engineers was in the pay of the Western and Atlantic Railroad, and the other, Mullins, who was injured, was in the pay of the Georgia Railroad, and at the very time when he was hurt was doing a job for which the Georgia Railroad, and not himself, was to receive pay from the other road. The Georgia Road furnished to the other an engine and engineer, that is to say a team and driver, for a single occasion. Whose servant was that driver? In the case of Laugher v. Pointer, 5 Barn. & Cress. 547, a stable-keeper had hired a team and driver to another person for a day, and the question was, whose servant was the driver ? The Court of King’s Bench were equally divided, but Judge Story, in a note to sec.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.E. 365, 110 Ga. 192, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brush-electric-light-power-co-v-wells-ga-1900.