Floyd v. Ocmulgee Electric Membership Corp.

16 S.E.2d 208, 65 Ga. App. 305, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 315
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 15, 1941
Docket28871.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 S.E.2d 208 (Floyd v. Ocmulgee Electric Membership Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Floyd v. Ocmulgee Electric Membership Corp., 16 S.E.2d 208, 65 Ga. App. 305, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 315 (Ga. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Stephens, P. J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) This is a suit by the owner of a single-wire, ground-circuit, telephone sys *312 tern, to recover as damages, for the alleged destruction of the use of her telephone system by the defendants, the cost of “metallicizing” the plaintiff's telephone lines. The plaintiff alleged that the location and operation by the defendants of a high-tension electric-light and power line near her telephone line created “electro-inductive interference” with the telephone line, and caused a “din of buzzes, screeches, noises, and hisses, drowning out conversations and communications over said lines, rendering said telephone lines and system inoperative and useless.” A survey of the authorities on the question discloses that in a case involving conflicting uses of electricity a stricter rule is applied where the interference is caused by “conduction” than where the interference is caused by “induction” of electricity to a single wire, ground-circuit, telephone line. This is so for the reason that interference by conduction can be practically eliminated by the proper erection and maintenance of a high-tension electric power line. The term “induction” is here used in the sense of the flow of electricity from one wire to another without actual contact, and through the medium of the atmosphere, and the term “conduction” is used in the sense of the flow of electricity from one wire to another without actual contact, and through the medium of the earth. See Kesbey, Electric Wires, § 214; Deiser, Conflicting Uses of Electricity, 12 et seq.; 23 A. L. R. 1260, note; Dakota Central Telephone Co. v. Spink County Power Co., 42 S. D. 448 (176 N. W. 143); Yamhill County Mutual Telephone Co. v. Yamhill Electric Co., 111 Ore. 57 (224 Pac. 1081, 33 A. L. R. 373).

The question for decision under the pleadings is whether a telephone company using only one wire with the earth as a return circuit, the earlier occupant of a public highway or rural country road, or an electric power and light company, the later occupant, using a high-tension current, shall bear the expense of installing a metallic return circuit in the telephone lines in order to eliminate the “ electro-magnetic induction of the telephone lines by the power lines.” While interference by conduction may be practically eliminated by the proper erection and maintenance of the power line, this is not true of electro-magnetic induction. As to interference by magnetic induction, which is the transmission of electricity from one electric circuit to another by means of an electric field (see Curtis on Electricity, § 349), no duty rests on the defendants in *313 the construction and maintenance of the electric power lines to eliminate such interference. Electro-magnetic induction may be practically prevented by a co-ordinate transposition of wires on both the high-tension electric lines and the single-wire telephone lines. This may be accomplished only where the electric circuits on both systems are metallic. Hence the remedy can not be applied to an earth-return telephone line. This is the reason that -the courts have generally held that one maintaining under law■ful authority a high-tension electric power line along a public Toad is not liable to the owner of a previously constructed telephone •system, rightfully constructed along such road, for the cost of metallicizing the telephone system, which constitutes substituting a metallic return circuit for the earth as formerly used by the single-wire telephone system, which metallicizing is made necessary by ■electro-magnetic induction from the high-power electric line which interferes with the use of the telephone system by causing a loud buzzing sound over the telephone wires and in the telephones to ¡such an extent as to make it difficult, and often impossible, to hear ■or understand a voice over the telephone line. The only duty ■owing by the electric power company to the owner of the telephone system is to properly construct and maintain the high-tension electric power lines. The law is settled in this State, as well as in -other jurisdictions both in America and England, that there is no liability for interference with a telephone system, using a single wire with the earth for a return circuit, on account of magnetic induction caused by a high-power electric power line, in the absence of negligence, malice, or unskilfulness on the part of the interfering electric power line or agency. “A power company, lawfully maintaining its power lines, constructed according to the standards of modern engineering, on one side of a public highway, is not liable for inductive interference of a telephone line on the •other side of the highway, or for the cost of metallicizing the telephone line so as to prevent such interference, where the telephone -was a single-wire system, with a return circuit through the ground, which was not in accordance with the standards of modern engineering. . . In order for the defendant power company to be liable in the premises, the evidence would have to authorize a finding that it wrongfully and negligently constructed its power lines, ¡and in so doing, injured and damaged plaintiff’s telephone system.” *314 Georgia Power Co. v. Parker, 48 Ga. App. 807 (2) (173 S. E. 730); Georgia Power Co. v. Parker, 51 Ga. App. 546 (181 S. E. 117). In Citizens Telephone Co. v. Fort Wayne &c. Ry. Co., 53 Inch App. 230 (100 N. E. 309, Ann. Cas. 1916A, 132), the Court of Appeals held that where a telephone company and an electric railway company, operating under city franchises, place their poles and wires on the street, and the current over the telephone wires is interfered with by conduction or induction from the higher voltage current carried over the other company’s wires, the railway company is not liable in damages to the telephone company unless it has exceeded its rights, been negligent in its construction, used faulty or improper appliances, or in some way unnecessarily caused injury, even though it might have constructed its railway elsewhere. As stated by that court: “It can not be said that the mere fact that appellee constructed its line of railroad with its high-voltage system of electricity necessary to propel its cars, in close proximity to appellant’s wires, on a public highway, when it might have been constructed elsewhere, would of itself constitute an act of negligence on which appellant could base a cause of action.”

In the case now before this court the petition fails to show any negligence by the defendants in the construction and maintenance of the high-tension electric power lines. It is not alleged that the defendants used faulty or improper equipment, material, and appliances in the construction and maintenance thereof. Stripped of conclusions, the petition shows only that had the defendant constructed the electric lines elsewhere, and not so near, on and along the same highway right of way, and parallel with the telephone lines, the consequent damage to the telephone line and system would not have resulted.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.E.2d 208, 65 Ga. App. 305, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floyd-v-ocmulgee-electric-membership-corp-gactapp-1941.