This suit was instituted by appellee to recover damages for personal injury alleged to have been proximately caused by the negligence of appellant in failing to incase with a visible shield a guy wire attached to a light pole in or near a street in the town of Athens.
Appellee alleged that on January 21, 1919, he was riding horseback and driving cattle along the street, and that while he was riding after the cattle his horse got astraddle of the wire and became frightened, and that at the, same time he came in contact with and saw the wire himself and bowed down to pass under it, but that the action of the horse, together with his own entanglement with the wire, caused him to fall to the ground and break his arm. • He alleged that he could not see the wire and could not know its location, because there was no shield or covering on if by which it could be seen.
*423 Appellant demurred to the petition and answered denying the allegations, pleading contributory negligence, and affirmatively alleging that appellee rode his horse out of and away from the street to the location of the guy wire and thereby came in contact with it and received his injury and hence could not recover; and also pleading that at the time and place of the injury appellee was driving loose cattle over and across streets and roadways and private property without sufficient assistance to keep them oft of sidewálks and private property, in violation of an ordinance of Athens, specially pleaded.
The ease was tried before the court and a jury. The verdict and judgment were against appellant, and it prosecutes this appeal.
Appellant vigorously argues that its general demurrer ought to have been sustained because the petition alleges a set of facts which show that the injuries complained of proximately resulted from appellee’s own negligent acts, and not from the negligence of appellant in failing to perform any duty to prevent injury to him, contending that the petition discloses that appellee rode his horse out of the public road to the location of the guy wire, which was where appellant owed no duty to protect any person from injury caused by it.
The allegations of the petition as to where the guy wire was with reference to the street are not altogether clear. It is alleged that appellant “had erected on one of'the roads or streets in the west portion of the said city of Athens, and near said road or street, a post which was fastened or stationed with at least one guy wire extending from the top of said post to the ground. * * * ” Elsewhere it is alleged that the post and guy wire were established and erected “next to and adjoining” a public street or road in Athens — a popular street in constant use by people traveling upon it by means of all. the various modes of travel upon such highways and extending through a densely populated portion of the town,
Again, it is alleged that the defendant and its employés negligently placed “said post and. gay wire on and near the said street or road; that the said guy wire and post are within 3 or 4 feet of the said street or road that is continuously occupied and used by travelers with buggies and automobiles, wagons, and horseback riders.”
“That street down there in front of Mr. J. M. Luker’s, where the accident occurred, is a public street and used by the people frequently and numerously. * * * ”
He also testified:
“The post and guy wire is just to the left of the road, but so far as the thoroughfare is concerned the post and wire are in the thoroughfare.”
The testimony for both parties was to the effect that the pole and guy wire were from 4 feet to 8 feet north of that part of the street along which the wagon road extended. Appellant’s witnesses testified that the pole and wire were located north of the graded portion of the street a distance varying from 18 inches to 30 inches. J. M. Luker testified that the guy wire was right in the e’dge of the street and said it'was “mighty near in the street.” He testified that there are no sidewalks and that the street line is not definitely determined, and said:
“I expect, if the street was measured clear out to where it ought to go, it would take that post in.”
The appellant itself proved that the pole was placed in its position under express authority of a franchise. This must be taken as indicating that it was at a point mutually recognized as being on a street. And so it seems to us that, if there is any objection to the charge on this feature, it is that it told the jury the undisputed facts showed the light was erected north of and adjacent to the street, notwithstanding the presence of evidence in the record, probably sufficient to sustain a finding that it was in the street itself. But such objection is not available to appellant, because this charge could have done it no harm under the state of fihe evidence.
. The assignments of error from the third to the'seventh, inclusive, all involve the assumption that appellee had departed from the public road or street when he was injured; that he was at no place where appellant owed him any duty at the time he was injured; but that he was a trespasser whose own carelessness and negligence produced the injury. And proceeding upon the assumption of these views, the charge of the court upon negligence and upon contributory negligence and the court’s declining to give peremptory charges for appellant are all criticized by it. However, we have carefully considered the charge given and those special charges requested and refused, and under the evidence we think the charge was substantially sound and that the action of the court in refusing those requested by appellant ought to be sustained.
“The public is not in all instances confined to the graded portion of the road, or the part habitually used by the public, but circumstances might arise in which the public would be entitled to use that part of the road which has not been graded. There is nothing in the law that confines the public solely to the graded part of the road. * * * ” South Texas Tel. Co. v. Tabb, supra.
It appears to be undisputed that there were no sidewalks or fences extending along the street, and that its boundaries, were not indicated by visible objects of any kind so that a traveler might know the location of its confines. Under these circumstances, a traveler in the evening, when such objects as a guy wire are hidden from his vision in the twilight or darkness, and there being nothing to show him that his course is not within the specific way ordinarily used for public travel, has a right to pursue-the general course and direction of the road, and if in so doing he goes outside'the limits of the commonly used and beaten roadway and is injured by an object so near the roadway as to be dangerous to one lawfully using the highway, and there being nothing to give the traveler notice of the presence of the danger until too late to avoid it, a right of recovery exists. As to what distance in measurement from the road itself the dangerous place must be in order not to be in close proximity with the road is a practical proposition which the law does not undertake to define, but leaves to the sound judgment and practical experience of the jury to determine under the facts of the ease. Davis v. Hill, 41 N. H. 329; Denver v. Solomon,
*425
The judgment of the cpurt below is affirmed.
<Ste»For other oases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
<§^For other cases see same topic and KEY-NUMIiEEUn all Key-Numbered Digests and indexes
