Eining v. Georgia Railway & Electric Co.

66 S.E. 237, 133 Ga. 458, 1909 Ga. LEXIS 243
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 17, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 66 S.E. 237 (Eining v. Georgia Railway & Electric Co.) 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
Eining v. Georgia Railway & Electric Co., 66 S.E. 237, 133 Ga. 458, 1909 Ga. LEXIS 243 (Ga. 1909).

Opinion

Holden, J.

Tbe plaintiff brought suit against tbe Atlanta Telephone and Telegraph Company and the Georgia Bailway and Electric Company, for damages on account of the death of a horse belonging to the plaintiff, alleged to have been worth $250. .The following allegations appear in the petition. “The Atlanta Telephone and Telegraph Company has lines of wire strung over the streets of the City of Atlanta, and its telephones are in numerous parts of the city. It has an office and agents therein and does a general telephone business, and will hereinafter be called the Telephone Company. The Georgia Bailway and Electric Company is a street-railway corporation having a line of tracks running through the streets of the City of Atlanta and a line of wires running over the streets and fastened to poles, and does a general street-railway business, and furnishes light to the City of Atlanta and light and power for commercial purposes in the said city. This company will hereinafter be called the Street Bailway Company. At the southwest corner of Whitehall and West Fair streets in said city the wires of the Telephone Company are supported upon a cross-arm or beam which is attached to a pole belonging to the Street Bailway Company, and runs diagonally across West Fair street in a westerly direction to the north side of West Fair street, where it intersects with Forsyth street. The wires of the Street Bailway Company carry currents of electricity of high voltage, [460]*460which are dangerous and fatal to the life of man and beast coming in contact with them. On Saturdajr, Sept. 5, 1908, at about or 8 o’clock in the evening, the plaintiff’s servant was driving the bread wagon and horse of plaintiff along West Fair street near to and just west of Whitehall street. The driver was proceeding with proper care, when suddenly the horse pame in contact with and became entangled in a wire which was lying unguarded in the middle of the street, and received an electric shock which killed him. It was dark at the time, and the driver did not see the wire which lay in the path of the horse. Plaintiff charges that the wire with which the horse came in contact was that of the Telephone Compaq, which had broken in two and fallen across the wire of the Street Eailway Company; and both wires were imperfectly insulated, and the telephone wire received a heavy charge of electric current from the Street Eailway Company’s wire. Plaintiff charges that the Telephone Company was negligent in having a wire that was so weak or worn as to break in two without apparent reason; and was further negligent in .not having sufficient insulation on said wire; and was further negligent in not having a sufficient number of guard-wires under its telephone wires to prevent any of them when broken from falling on the wires or to the street below. Plaintiff charges that the Street Railway Company was negligent in -not having its wires at said place sufficiently insulated to prevent an occurrence of the kind described; and was further negligent in permitting "the Telephone Company to string its wires across this Street railway Company’s wires without sufficient guard-wires to prevent the Telephone Company’s wires from coming into connection with the deadly current of electricity with which the Street Railway Company’s wires were habitually charged, and was further negligent in permitting the Telephone Company to use the same pole as carried the Street Eailway Company’s wires without any safeguards to prevent a wire of one company coming in contact with that of the other company.” The Electric Company filed a demurrer to the petition. The court passed the following order: “The first three grounds of the foregoing demurrer are sustained and the case dismissed as to the Ga. Ry. and Elect. Co.” The first three grounds of the demurrer were as follows: “There is a misjoinder of parties defendant in said ease. Plaintiff in the same petition and in the same count seeks to set forth a [461]*461cause of action against the Atlanta Telephone and Telegraph Company and a cause of action against the Georgia Kailway and Electric Company; and there are facts in said petition showing that said defendants were not joint tort-feasors. Because said petition seeks to bring two separate and distinct causes of action against two separate and distinct parties in the same petition and in the same count.” To the order sustaining the demurrer the plaintiff excepted.

1, 2. We think the court committed error in sustaining the demurrer on the three grounds stated. Where wires charged with a deadly current of electricity are strung along a public highway, the degree of care required to prevent injury to property or persons lawfully on the highway is governed by the amount of danger attending such use of the highway by the owner of the wires. In 2 Cooley on Torts (3d ed.), 1492, 1493, it is said: “Electricity is an invisible, impalpable force, highly dangerous to life and property; and those who make, sell, distribute, use, or handle it are bound to exercise care in proportion to the danger involved. Those using the public ways for electric wires carrying a dangerous current are bound to use a verjr high degree of care in the construction, use, and repair of such lines, to prevent injury to those lawfully upon such ways. A broken or fallen wire in a street, charged with a dangerous current of electricity, affords a presumption of negligence on the part of the owner of the wire. . Where the wires of two companies cross or are otherwise so related that there is danger of contact between them, there is a duty on both to guard against such contact, and for a neglect of this duty the companies are jointly and severally liable. Cases of this sort arise mainly where telegraph or telephone wires cross or parallel light or trolley wires. Where the plaintiff’s store was set on fire and burned by an electric current from the defendant’s trolley wires which had come in contact with the telephone wire to the plaintiff’s premises, it was held that the defendant owed a high degree of care in the management of its wires, that both the defendant and the telephone company were bound to guard against a contact of their wires, and that it was immaterial which wires were first installed” — citing Richmond etc. El. Ry. Co. v. Rubin, 102 Va. 809 (47 S. E. 834). In the case at bar the petition alleged, that the wires of the telephone company were strung upon a [462]*462cross-arm or beam attached to a pole belonging to the street-railway company, that the wires of the railway company carried currents of electricity dangerous and fatal to the life of man and beast coming into contact with them; that while the driver was proceeding with proper care the plaintiff’s horse came in contact with a wire lying unguarded in the middle of the street, and received an electric shock which killed him; that this wire was that of the telephone company, which had broken and had fallen across the wire of the street-railway company, and both wires were imperfectly insulated, and the telephone wire received a heavy charge of electric current from the street-railway company’s wiré. According to other allegations of the petition, if the wire of the telephone company had not been so “weak or worn” as to break, or if there had been a “sufficient insulation” of this wire or if there had been “a sufficient number of guard-wires under its telephone wires to prevent any of them when broken from falling on the wires or to the street below,” the injury would never have occurred. The petition charges the telephone company with being negligent in each of these three particulars.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.E. 237, 133 Ga. 458, 1909 Ga. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eining-v-georgia-railway-electric-co-ga-1909.