Sarratt v. Holston Quarry Co. of S.C.

177 S.E. 135, 174 S.C. 262, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 193
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 15, 1934
Docket13946
StatusPublished

This text of 177 S.E. 135 (Sarratt v. Holston Quarry Co. of S.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sarratt v. Holston Quarry Co. of S.C., 177 S.E. 135, 174 S.C. 262, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 193 (S.C. 1934).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Carter.

This suit, commenced in the Court of Common Pleas for Cherokee County, December 27, 1932, by Pearl Sarratt and M. A. Sarratt, as administrators of the estate of Carroll Sarratt, deceased, plaintiffs, against Holston Quarry Company of South Carolina and Lockhart Power Company, defendants, is an action brought under Lord Campbell’s Act *265 for recovery of damages alleged to have been sustained by the widow and children of the said Carroll Sarratt, on account of his death, which occurred on or about the 16th day of October, 1932, caused, according to plaintiffs’ allegations, by the tortious and wrongful conduct of the defendants. The defendants denied liability. Issues being joined, the case was tried at the March, 1933, term of said Court before Judge J. Henry Johnson and a jury, resulting in a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs against both of the defendants in the sum of $10,000.00. From the judgment entered on the verdict returned by the jury, the defendants, pursuant to due notice, have appealed to this Court.

The allegations of error imputed to the trial Judge by the appellants are stated under thirty-three exceptions, twenty-nine presented by the appellant Holston Quarry Company of South Carolina and four presented by Lockhart Power Company, but, as stated in the brief of counsel for appellants, the following are the issues involved in the appeal:

“ (1) Error in the admission of testimony.
“(2) Error in refusing a motion for nonsuit on various grounds.
“(3) Error in refusing to direct a verdict for appellant on various grounds.
“(4) Error in certain portions of the charge of the trial Judge to the jury, and of the refusal of the trial Judge to charge certain requests of the appellant.”

For the purpose of an understanding of the issues involved, at this juncture we shall state, in substance, the principal facts alleged by the plaintiffs as set forth in their complaint and upon which testimony was introduced.

Plaintiffs allege, in effect, that Carroll Sarratt died, intestate, about the 16th day of October, 1932, leaving as his only heirs his widow, Pearl Sarratt, and the following named children: Harry, age 17; Ruby, age 15; Claude, age 12; and Ruth Sarratt, age 2 years; that in October, 1932, Pearl Sarratt and M. A. Sarratt were duly appointed ad *266 ministrators of the estate of the said Carroll Sarratt, deceased, and that the action is brought for the benefit of the widow and children of the said deceased; that the defendant Lockhart Power Company, a corporation, is engaged in generating, transmitting, and vending electric power in this State with officers and agents in the said County of Cherokee, and that Holston Quarry Company is a corporation under the laws of South Carolina engaged in mining and quarrying stone, and owns and operates a stone quarry in said County of Cherokee at the edge of the City of Gaffney; that Holston Quarry Company makes extensive use of electricity in connection with operating its plant for power and lighting and to pump water from the quarry, and, prior to the death of the intestate, it entered into an agreement or arrangement whereby the Lcolchart Power Company was to furnish and supply its electric needs and requirements from Lockhart Power Company’s wire; that, in order to carry out the said agreement or arrangement, the defendants constructed of from the main power line of the Lockhart Power Company, “which stretches alongside of Limestone College in the populous outskirts of the City of Gaffney, a short spur line consisting of two bare, uninsulated copper wires, each heavily freighted with electricity of a deadly voltage, negligently and dangerously attached to short cross arms erected upon the top of a row of wooden poles stretching from 75 to 100 yards over into and upon the edge of said quarry to a certain metal shed, where the said uninsulated wires and other wires connected therewith, were dangerously and negligently arranged in such a careless and hazardous manner in and about the poles immediately contiguous to said shed, where the switch, hereinafter described, was located, and in and about the shed as to constitute them an everpresent danger to the lives of those persons moving in and about the said pole or shed, and that over this said spur power line, the defendant, Lockhart Power Company, at the instance of its co-defendant frequently and continu *267 ously transmitted, as needed or required, electricity of a high, deadly and dangerous voltage over the defective and dangerous equipment without taking any precaution to insulate the wires or to prevent the highly dangerous electric current being transmitted thereon from coming into contact with the persons employed in said quarry.”

The plaintiffs further allege, in this connection, that the defendants prepared and “erected two switches and connections, by the use of which the electric current being transported from the main line of the defendant Lockhart Power Company over the aforesaid spur line might be cut off or discontinued; that one of the switches prepared for such discontinuance was located within the quarry of the defendant Holston Quarry Company by the aforesaid metal shed, and that the other connection or switch was located at the junction of the main line of the defendant Lockhart Power Company with the said short line stretching over into the quarry, and that each of said switches necessarily was often used by the employees of the defendant Holston .Quarry Company of South Carolina,” and on information and belief the plaintiffs further allege that, although the defendants were fully apprised of the dangers incident to the switches referred to, they have maintained the same uninsulated and surrounded with wires surcharged with heavy and dangerous electric voltage, so much so that one who is not fully acquainted with the danger and thoroughly conversant with the character of electric current cannot use either of said switches without the most serious danger and hazard to' his life; that on the night of October 16, 1932, one J. H. Champion, an employee and servant of the defendant Hol-ston Quarry Company of South Carolina, in the regular scope of his employment, under the direction of his master, and in the exercise of due care, was about the said metal shed and the switch adj acent thereto; that, due to the uninsulated character of the numerous heavily charged wires leading to and about the said switch and shed, and the faulty con *268 struction and location of the same, the whole territory about the shed and switch was heavily and dangerously charged with electricity on the night in question, which was marked by damp and inclement weather; and that as the said J. H. Champion, in the exercise of due care, and without any knowledge or any forewarning of the danger, approached the said shed and switch in the customary manner as required by his employment, he was dangerously and seriously shocked and burnt about his body, all as a direct and proximate result of the said joint and concurrent negligence, recklessness, and willfulness of the defendants, and, as the said J. H.

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Bluebook (online)
177 S.E. 135, 174 S.C. 262, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sarratt-v-holston-quarry-co-of-sc-sc-1934.