Sloan v. J. G. White Engineering Co.

89 S.E. 964, 105 S.C. 226, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 200
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 17, 1916
Docket9471
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 89 S.E. 964 (Sloan v. J. G. White Engineering Co.) 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
Sloan v. J. G. White Engineering Co., 89 S.E. 964, 105 S.C. 226, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 200 (S.C. 1916).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justic® Gag®.

*231 Action for a tort to the person; recovery $12,500; appeal by the defendants.

The defendants were sued as joint tort-feasors for the electrocution of a young man named Sloan, who came to his death under circumstances of so complex a character as to call for a rather long statement of them. A dam had been constructed across Broad River, 25 miles north of Columbia, at a place called Parr Shoals, to, create water power for the generation of electricity. Copper wires had been strung on steel towers from Parr Shoals toward Columbia, and having for the terminus at Columbia a power house at the foot of Gervais street. These copper wires are called the transmission line. The power house was constructed of steel, brick, and cement, and the interior of it was for the reception, the storing, and the distribution • of electric power sent hither from Parr Shoals over the transmission line. The electric current from Parr Shoals had not been yet applied; the equipment therefor had not been completed. Somewhere betwixt- Parr Shoals and Columbia, at the slaughter pen some three miles from Columbia, there was- a break in the transmission lines; that is to say, the line was not yet continuous from Parr Shoals to Columbia.. From the power house and towards the north, which is towards Parr Shoals, there were several miles of continuous line. Just at the power house, on the northern side of it, the transmission line stopped short on the outer wall of the power house as is next described. On that side of the wall of the power house, and .running through the wall, there were bushings. This appliance was set to receive the transmission wire and take it through the wall into the power house. The bushings projected some 24 inches beyond both the inner and outer walls, and preparatory to insertion in and through the bushings, the transmission line was coiled around the projecting bushings on the outer wall, and thus remained for sevéral months before the accident. There was admittedly no grounding of the trans *232 mission line just at the power house. A witness for the defendants named Murphy testified that he grounded the transmission line at the second tower from the power house, about 200 feet away; and a witness named Rossman testified the transmission line was grounded at the slaughter pen some few miles north of the power house, and also at the steel tower on the canal bank still nearer to the power house. The workman, Sloan, was on a scaffold inside the power house, near the bushings, and with his back to the inner wall, and his fellow workman, Wilson, was a few feet from Sloan and facing- Sloan. These men were working for the General Electric Company, and were installing apparatus inside the power house. The transmission line was erected by the John G. White Company. A cloud suddenly gathered in the heavens in the vicinity of the power house, there was some thunder, a slight precipitation, a report as of a 22-cali-ber rifle, and the instantaneous electrocution by lightning of the worker, Sloan.

The plaintiff asserts that lightning hit the transmission line; that there was insufficient grounding or no grounding of the line; that the lightning passed from the line coiled around the bushing into the wall of the power house, through the steel plates set in the wall into Sloan’s body. The defendants assert that Sloan met his death by a freak of lightning and through no fault of theirs. And that is the case.

There are six exceptions to the proceedings had in the trial Court; they will be reported. That set out last will be considered first.

1. The defendants offered a witness, E. W. Robertson, to prove that the J. G. White Company built the transmission line merely as the hand of the Columbia Railway, Gas and Electric Company, and that the omissions of the White Company were those of the Columbia Company; that is to say, the White Company, in technical language of the law, was not an independent contractor, liable for its omissions. *233 The Court disallowed the testimony, and there was an exception by the defendant; but that issue was not argued in the briefs, and we assume it was abandoned.

2. The defendants have conceived that there was no need to print so much of the testimony, as it appears by question and answer; and they have by correct practice appealed from the Court’s order allowing the same. Of such there aré 18 pages of the witness, Wilson’s testimony; 12 pages of the witness, Odiorne; 7 pages of the witness, Nelson; 2 pages of the witness, Welborn, and 1 page of the witness, Rossman; or 40 pages all told. The defendant’s appeal is directed to a practice that has come to be a burden to litigants and a vexation to this Court. There are many questions put to witnesses to influence a jury. There is no need to put such in the case for appeal. There is much irrelevant testimony adduced in every trial. There is no need to repeat it here. We have examined the testimony so printed by question and answer in the instant case, and we think fully one-half of it ought to have been omitted. The respondent indicated at the bar a willingness to pay for it, and our inclination is that in the taxation of costs 20 pages of printed matter shall be charged to the respondent; but until a comprehensive rule, now under our consideration, is made to remedy the suggested evil, we make no present order.

1 *234 2 *233 3. The exception to the eighth request is twofold; that part designated as “a” suggests that the Court charged on the facts. There is no foundation for the suggestion. There was no reference to the testimony; the charge was a definition of prudence, diligence, and reasonable care. The jury was instructed that it consisted, not only of mechanical skill, that is, apt work with the hands, but it included also circumspection, that is, a state of mind looking ahead for probable consequences.

The part of the. exception marked “b” suggests that the charge held defendants to a higher degree of proof to estab *234 lish what constituted an act of God than the law requires. The charge was the defendant must not only prove: (1) That an act of God caused the death; but (2) that it was the sole cause, not preventable by the exercise of care on the defendant’s part. There was no dispute but that the death was caused by' the elemental act of God; the fact of death by lightning was alleged both in the complaint and answer, and the poets have said, “Lightning does the will of God.” The issuable matter was the joinder to that power of the defendant’s negligent acts of omission and commission. The specific acts of negligence were alleged, the failure to ground, and the wrapping of the wires around the bushings. When the defendants relied for a defense upon the act of God, as they did, it was incúmbent on them to show that there was no joinder to that of their own negligent act. The rule is so stated in Slater v. Railroad, 29 S. C. 96, 6 S. E. 936, and Ferguson v. Railroad, 91 S. C. 64, 74 S. E. 129, both of which were actions for lost freight.

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.E. 964, 105 S.C. 226, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sloan-v-j-g-white-engineering-co-sc-1916.