103 Ga. 512 | Ga. | 1898
Rebecca Wells sued' the Brush Electric Light & Power Company for $10,000 damages, alleging, in substance, that on May 27, 1896, her husband, Marlow Wells, while in the employment of the defendant company and engaged, under its direction, in repairing or doing necessary work on the lead wires used for the lighting of a drug-store in the city of Savannah, received a violent shock from a current of electricity which, without his knowledge, was suddenly and unexpectedly turned on the wires, resulting in his death. The shock was received as follows : The wires were strung on a pole near the drug-store; there are two crosspieces on this pole on which insulators are fixed. The upper crosspiece is used for the company’s parallel wires, the lower is used for its lead wires, and is five or six feet below the upper. The two lead wires are connected with the main wires, and are dropped down to the insulators on the lower crosspiece, to which they are secured. From these they pass into a converter, which is also secured to the pole, about twelve or fifteen inches below the second crosspiece, and from this converter they are carried into the drug-store. Plaintiff’s husband had climbed the pole to the first crosspiece, about sixteen feet from the ground, and in order to do the necessary repairs it became necessary to cut the lead wires. He had succeeded in cutting one of them, severing it just above the insulator, leaving a small piece or point projecting therefrom. In passing his right arm around the pole to cut the other wire at the same point, he rested his right arm, between the elbow and armpit, on this projecting wire, and in some manner his arm, shoulder, or other hand came in contact with the hanging wire which he had just severed ; so that when he seized the second wire with his nippers, to cut it, he received through his body the powerful voltage from the company’s wire, which caused his death. Immediately previous to the accident there was no current on the wires, but it was turned on from the company’s power-house at the moment he was engaged in the act of cutting the second wire, and his death was caused by the gross negligence of the
The grounds of the motion were, that the verdict was contrary to law and evidence, and excessive, and that the court erred as follows : (1) In charging : “The plaintiff must satisfy you that the husband’s life was lost through the negligence of the defendant, or that it was not the fault of the plaintiff (?) by which his life was lost. At this point I give you the law of the code bearing upon this question : If the plaintiff by ordinary care could have avoided the consequences to himself caused by the defendant’s negligence, he is not entitled to recover ; but in other cases the defendant is not relieved, although the plaintiff may in some way contribute to the injury sustained. If the deceased either caused the injury by his negligence, or could by ordinary care have avoided it, the verdict should be for the defendant. If the deceased was faultless, neither contributing to the negligence nor omitting ordinary care to avoid it, the verdict should be against the company for full damages. If the deceased contributed to the injury, but did not himself cause it, and could not have avoided it by ordinary care, the verdict should be against the company, but not for full damages; the damage allowed should be diminished in proportion to the fault attributed to the plaintiff.
Judgment reversed.