Georgia Power Co. v. Puckett

179 S.E. 284, 50 Ga. App. 720, 1935 Ga. App. LEXIS 277
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 16, 1935
Docket24044
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 179 S.E. 284 (Georgia Power Co. v. Puckett) 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
Georgia Power Co. v. Puckett, 179 S.E. 284, 50 Ga. App. 720, 1935 Ga. App. LEXIS 277 (Ga. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Sutton, J.

This case arose on account of an injury received by the plaintiff in catching hold of a broken telephone wire that had 'become charged with electricity from adjacent high-tension power lines of the defendant company. The defendant company denied liability, setting up that the plaintiff’s injuries were brought about by his own negligence and failure to exercise ordinary care to protect himself. It is contended by the defendant that the plaintiff’s own testimony shows this fact; that he was in charge of the Hamilton Telephone Company, and was an experienced lineman; that he knew that the power company’s lines were constructed over and so near the telephone lines that there was a leakage of current from the power company wires to the telephone lines at a place in front of the Field Rock Club House in Hamilton, and that this [721]*721condition had existed for as much as a year; that some of the wires of the power company were down in the alley near this club house on the morning after the electrical storm; that the plaintiff knew that if the wires came in contact with the telephone wires they would be charged with electric current; that his telephone system was disturbed and the service disrupted bn the night of the storm; that immediately after seeing some of the wires of the power company down in the alley near the club house, he walked down this alley a very short distance, where he saw a telephone wire burned or broken in two and hanging down by a telephone pole near the edge of the alley, and that he stepped over to this wire and took hold of it with his bare hand and received the injury complained of.

From the plaintiff’s own version of the occurrence the facts can be addressed substantially as follows: that at the time the defendant power company erected its power and electric-light lines in Hamilton, Georgia, the lines of the Hamilton Telephone Company were already there and being used by the telephone company; that at some places in the City of Hamilton the high-tension wires of the defendant were very close to those of the local telephone company, and at points crossed over such telephone lines, sagging down sometimes to not more than three or four inches above the lines of the telephone company; that the insulation had become faulty and worn off from these high-voltage wires of the power company at certain places; that this had caused the electric current to leak onto the-telephone wires, causing trouble with the telephone system, for instance causing the drops on the old-type switchboard to fall, as if some one were ringing for the operator; that one particular place where the high-tension electric wires crossed above the telephone wires was near the Field Rock Club House; that the electric wires were only a few inches above the telephone lines at this point, and the insulation was worn off the electric wires at this place; that the plaintiff was the manager and sole operator and lineman of the telephone company in Hamilton; that on the night of July 31, 1933, there was a wind, rain, and electric storm at this city; that electricity upon the telephone lines became so bad that the plaintiff had to cease the operation of the telephone system about ten o’clock that night; that there was some trouble with the electric wires in the vicinity, plaintiff knowing this from the fact that there was a continual falling of the drops on the [722]*722switchboard and burring sound over the wires; that lightning disturbed the telephone system in that manner and there was an unusual amount of lightning that night; that the plaintiff also knew that there was some trouble on the power lines from the fact that an alarm bell of the power company located in a near-by house rang several times; that the power company was informed by its agent that there was trouble with its wires in said city and sent a lineman there the next morning to make an examination of the condition; that about seven o’clock a. m., the plaintiff, without being invited or requested to do so, went with the power-company man to look over the situation and ascertain the extent of the damage and trouble, the plaintiff’s object being to see about his telephone lines, that they walked out towards the Field Rock Club House, where apparently there was trouble, and they saw some of the power-company wires down in the alley just below the club house;' that the plaintiff knew that it was dangerous to touch a live wire and that a telephone wire could be charged with electricity by contact with an electric wire; that there was a switch there that could have been turned off and all the electric lines in the city would have been dead, but the defendant’s servant did not turn it off; that the plaintiff observed a telephone wire broken in two and hanging down on a telephone pole to within about four feet of the ground; that this was just a few feet from the edge of the alley and down near where this alley intersects with the Columbus highway and south of where the power company lines were down in this street or alley below the club house; that the plaintiff did not have any tools with him to repair his wires, but had come on this trip to make an examination of conditions; that the plaintiff, for no apparent reason, crossed the street and caught hold of the loose telephone wire and the same was alive, charged with electric current from the power lines, when he was shocked and immediately rendered unconscious, producing the injuries complained of.

It is contended by the plaintiff that his injuries were not caused by his own failure to exercise ordinary care, and that the evidence shows that he had every reason to believe that the wire he caught hold of was not charged with electric current, but that the trouble with the telephone system and this wire that he caught hold of was caused by lightning during the electric storm the night before he was injured; that while he knew the power company lines were [723]*723constructed and maintained over his telephone lines and so close thereto in some places that the current leaked onto the telephone lines from the power company wires, which had caused a partial disruption of the telephone service, no personal injuries had resulted to any one therefrom up to that time; but that a complete disruption of the telephone system had been caused on the night of the electric storm; that he found the fuse-box of the telephone company on fire immediately after the storm subsided, and climbed the telephone pole and undertook to pull the wires from this fuse-box with his bare hands, and, failing to get them loose, he then wrapped an iron chain over these wires and stood on the ground and pulled them loose; that he received no shock from doing this, and, therefore, thought that lightning had caused and was responsible for the trouble with the telephone system; that a witness for the power company testified that the plaintiff told him just a short time before he was injured “that he had a terminal box burnt up.down there and thought it was lightning;” and that the plaintiff testified that the agent of the power company, with whom he went that morning to the alley in front of the club house, stated tp the plaintiff that the trouble was in the opposite direction from where they saw the power-company wires down in the street or alley and from where the telephone wire was hanging down, which caused the injury to the plaintiff when he took hold of it.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.E. 284, 50 Ga. App. 720, 1935 Ga. App. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-power-co-v-puckett-gactapp-1935.