Mobile Electric Co. v. Fritz
This text of 77 So. 235 (Mobile Electric Co. v. Fritz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The action is under the homicide statute to recover damages for defendant’s wrongfully causing the death of plaintiff’s intestate. The wrong relied upon for cause of the death was defendant’s allowing a heavily and dangerously charged electric wire to fall, or remain down, in a public street in the city of Mobile, with which wire deceased, while using the street, came in contact, and was thereby killed. One count relied upon wantonness in defendant’s allowing the wire to fall or to remain down while it was so dangerously charged with electricity; while the other charged only simple negligence.
There was a severe wind and electric storm in Mobile on the night of the accident; *693 and to it, as an act of vis major, for which the defendant was not responsible, the defendant ascribed the falling of the wire, setting up lack of knowledge and opportunity to remove the wire or to cut out the circuit before the fatal accident happened. It is sufficient to say that much evidence was offered by both parties on the trial upon this issue, and resulted in a finding thereon by the jury in favor of the plaintiff, without any error of law intervening, sufficient to set aside the finding. The trial resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $17,500.
Defendant moved for a new trial on the grounds, among others, that there was no evidence to support a finding under the wanton count, and, second, that the verdict was. excessive in amount. This motion was heard, and was denied by the trial court, and defendant appeals, assigning errors as to the ruling on the motion for a new trial. As both questions were raised and insisted upon in the motion for a new trial, and they are the main if not the only questions insisted upon by appellant as for error, we will proceed to treat these two questions.
Electricity is one of the most insidious and violent, and at the same time one of the most useful, forces known to man. It is, to use the language of the Supreme Court of North Carolina (Mitchell v. Raleigh Electric Co., 129 N. C. 166, 39 S. E. 801, 55 L. R. A. 398, 85 Am. St. Rep. 735):
“The most deadly and dangerous power recognized as a necessary agency in developing our civilization and promoting our comfort and business affairs. It differs from all other dangerous utilities. Its association is with the most inoffensive and harmless piece of mechanism, if wire can be classified as such, in common use. In adhering to the wire, it gives no warning or knowledge of its deadly presence; vision cannot detect it; it is without color, motion, or body; latently and without sound it exists, and, being odorless, the only means of its discovery lie in the senses of feeling, communicated through the touch, which, as soon as done, becomes its victim.”
AVhere from the nature of a business, danger to life, and especially to the lives of many or of the public, is great, commpn prudence, as well as the laws of humanity, requires a degree of care and watchfulness to be exercised, commensurate with the attendant danger. A given act or course of conduct, under existing and surrounding circumstances, may be the exercise of reasonable care and prudence, while the same act or conduct, under different; surrounding or attending circumstances, may be simple negligence, or may even amount to wanton conduct. So viewing the evidence in this case, we are not willing to affirm that there was error in submitting the question of wantonness to the jury.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
77 So. 235, 200 Ala. 692, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobile-electric-co-v-fritz-ala-1917.