Action .by husband (appellee) for losses occasioned him in consequence of personal injury wrongfully inflicted, it is alleged, by the defendant’s negligent act or omission, of an electric “droplight” installed by defendant in the barn of plaintiff; the contact being afforded by the wife’s efford to turn on light in the usual way.
A number of errors assigned and insisted upon in brief relate to the rulings on the admission of evidence,’ and to instructions to the jury, with respect to the elements, character, and measure of damages recoverable in actions of this nature. The general subject was dealt with in Southern Railway Co. v. Crowder,
In the absence of abuse of th^Vljtidiclai'^i.s^ret'io-ff reposed in trial courts to d et er m in © (wll etltfeY, ^jfiffo'lJj Setibn5, a question or interrogatory to a' -witi eáíAiíÁ lé'ácliñ'g■ ‘of not, this court will not revise- a í^fi&^áiáilloWá’g’ a question or interogatory on that ground. Donnell v. Jones,
Joyce, in his first book on Electric Law, at section 445d, thus states the duty ancl measure of care resting on and required of an electrical company rendering service to individuals: Such a company “is obligated to use a degree of care commensurate with the risks and dangers involved to send a safe current into the building, and a patron of such a company lias a right to assume that such a current as is consistent with the proper rendering of the service contracted for will be used.” Such a company is not an insurer against danger or injury in any event; but where it affords the means for the service and undertakes to supply the light, installing wires .and apparatus therefor, the duty and measure of care are as before stated. 1 Joyce, §§ 445b, 438a; 15 Cyc. pp. 471-473. It is also the duty of such a company to make reasonable and proper inspection of its appliances. This duty does not contemplate such inspection as would absolutely forestall injuries. Whether in a given case the duty to inspect, as reasonable care, prudence, and foresight would suggest, has been performed is a question for the jury to determine under all the facts and .circumstances of the event. 1 Joyce, § 438b, and notes thereto.
In this connection reference may be made to charge 21 refused to defendant. That charge will be set forth in the report of the appeal. It was well refused. Its effect was to take from the jury the right to find negligence, in respect of the broken pin supporting the wire, if the rotten part of the pin was down in the hole in the
At the request of the plaintiff the court gave this special charge.(69) to the jury: “If Mrs. Appleton, in a reasonably prudent manner, caught hold of the lamp to turn on the light, and when she did so there was an escape of electricity from the lamp or its connecting part, which severely burned her hand and shocked her into insensibility, then the burden of proof is on the defendant to satisfy the jury reasonably by the evidence that such escape of electricity was without negligence on its part.” It is insisted, in brief for appellant that the charge possesses the serious vice of misplacing the burden of proof. The company having installed the Avires and appliances to conA'ey into plaintiff’s building electricity for domestic and lighting purposes and uses, and injury having attended its presence and use, as the charge (69) hypothesizes, the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur applies to cast on the defendant the burden of negativing its negligence in the premises. — Alexander v. Nanticoke Light Co.,
Count 11 was unobjectionable.
For the error occurring in admitting evidence by Zell of the report and finding of Watford, the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
