Plaintiff’s status. It is contended by the defendant that the allegations of the petition show plaintiff to have been a trespasser. We agree.
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In determining the status of a person, that is to say, whether he was an invitee, a licensee or a trespasser, neither his age nor his capacity, mental or physical, is a factor for consideration.
Savannah, Fla. &c. R. Co. v. Beavers,
There are no allegations of invitation to the plaintiff by the defendant, or of the extending to him of permission to climb its power pole. On demurrer, the petition must be construed in the light of these omissions as well as of the averments.
Houston v. Pollard,
A trespasser is one who, though peaceably, wrongfully enters upon the property of another. In the context here it is one who wrongfully goes upon or climbs the pole of the defendant; or, to state it differently, one who, without authority or pennission from the owner, does so. Permission or consent to climb the pole can not be implied, even if the owner may have knowledge that it was customary for children to play in the area where it was located.
Bowland v. Byrd,
“A power company constructed over the land of another, with his consent, its transmission line. The wires were three in number, strung to poles at a height of 22 feet from the ground. The wires passed over a sweetgum tree, the top of which had been cut out to prevent contact of the wires with the tree. The wires were not insulated, and carried an electrical current of high voltage. The tree had sometimes been visited by children for the purpose of procuring the gum which exuded from cuts or abrasures on the tree, but the power company’s officials had no knowledge of this. A thirteen-year-old boy, unusually well-grown for his age, though warned by his father some months previously of the dangerous character of the wires, climbed the tree in search of gum, came in contact with the wires, and was killed.
Held,
that in a suit for damages for the alleged wrongful death of the boy, the power company is not liable.”
Brown v. Panola Light
&c.
Co.,
In
Butler v. Brogdon,
In each of these cases the child was, expressly or by necessary implication, held to have been a trespasser (in any event no more than a bare licensee, where the rule is the same) to whom no duty was owed save that of not luring him into a mantrap or doing him wilful and wanton harm.
Leach v. Inman,
Mantraps. Did the uninsulated wire, covered with a dark weather-proofing substance, leading from the high voltage transmission line into the transformer box constitute a “mantrap” within the meaning of this rule? We think not.
The doctrine of mantrap or pitfall is rested upon the theory that the owner is expecting a trespasser or a licensee and has prepared the premises to do him injury. Mosley v. Alabama Power Co.,
Our research has revealed few cases in which the situation con
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sidered was held to have been a mantrap. Other than those above cited, are
Rollestone v. Cassirer & Co.,
Another situation is where the power company and the owner of a sawmill knowingly permitted children to play on a sawdust pile that was accumulating under. a high voltage uninsulated electric line and took no steps to alleviate the - dangerous condition or to prevent the continued play when the sawdust pile had built to a height just under the line. There were' allegations of knowledge that the children had been and were customarily playing under the wire until it reached a height enabling one of them to reach up and take hold. From this, a conscious indifference and resulting intent to injure might have been inferred. And again, the children were not -trespassers, but licensees whose presence was known.
Clinton v. Gunn-Willis Lmbr. Co., 77
Ga. App. 643 (
Others are:
Central of Ga. R. Co. v. Ledbetter,
The following have been held not to be mantraps, pitfalls or hidden perils within this rule: A door opening into a dark, empty space below,
Pries v. Atlanta Enterprises, Inc.,
We find no mantrap situation in this case. It does not appear from the allegations that there was any preparation of the pole for the purpose of doing injury to an expected trespasser, or that the defendant acted with such conscious indifference concerning it as to infer an intent to injure.
Wilful and wanton negligence.
Does the petition show wilful and wanton negligence on the part of this defendant? We think not. Illustrative of what an act of wilful and wanton negligence is may be found in
Savannah, Fla. &c. R. Co. v. Godkin,
“In addition the defendants would not be liable for anything but affirmative acts, amounting to wilfulness.
Leach v. Inman,
The owner owes no duty to a licensee, and certainly none to a trespasser, to inspect the premises or to prepare a safe place for his reception.
Cobb v. First Nat. Bank of Atlanta,
Defendant’s franchise, and the city ordinance. Do the provisions in the franchise obtained August 18, 1905, from the City of Savannah to the defendant, requiring that it insulate its wires thoroughly and maintain them to the satisfaction of the mayor and aldermen impose a duty upon the defendant to this plaintiff, under the facts alleged? We think not.
It is alleged that the franchise was granted by a city ordinance, but it matters not whether the negligence relied upon was of the common law type or that which resulted from the violation of some law or ordinance; it must appear that the plaintiff was injured as the result of a violation of some duty owed to him. There is no distinction between the two kinds of negligence as affecting the plaintiff’s right to recover.
Tyson v. Shoemaker,
The duty of insulating is not absolute. If the company maintains its wires at a height such that it is not reasonable to anticipate that people will come in contact with them, it is not generally required. 29A CJS 1073, Electricity, § 42; 26 AmJur2d 332, Electricity, § 122. Cf. Croxton v. Duke Power Co., 181 F2d 306; Morton’s Admr. v. Kentucky-Tennessee Light & Power Co.,
The extent of liability would not differ whether it rested upon common-law negligence or upon a provision in an ordinance, as was pointed out in
Tyson v. Shoemaker,
Concerning the ordinance prohibiting the placing of hooks or prongs on poles at heights less than eight feet from the ground, we do not find any violation alleged. Braces for holding the meter box do not come within the prohibited category. These were not intended for the purpose of climbing; the diagram attached to the petition as an exhibit discloses that they were not so designed. The box rested on them and they turned up around it to prevent it from becoming displaced. It was to the .placing of accessories
designed -for climbing
use that the ordinance was directed. If the plaintiff used the braces for climbing, he made an unintended use of them. “Where an instrumentality is being put to a purpose or use not intended, the owner or person in control thereof is not liable for injuries occasioned thereby, unless he had actual knowledge that it was defective and unsuited for that purpose, and also knew or should have anticipated that it would be diverted to the foreign use.”
Culbreath v. Kutz Co.,
Nor can it be said that the presence of the pipes to the fuel oil tanks of Starland Dairies were “hooks or prongs” in violation of the ordinance. They were not attached to the pole, were not the property of the defendant, and were not placed by the defendant. Obviously these were not intended to be used as a “ladder” in climbing defendant’s pole.
Knowledge or notice.
There is no allegation of actual knowledge on the part of the defendant that plaintiff was climbing or would climb the pole. It is alleged that the defendant knew children had customarily played in the vicinity of the pole for a long period of time, and it is alleged that plaintiff’s presence on the premises was known, or should have been known. On general demurrer this must be taken as no more than an allegation of constructive knowledge.
Loyal v. Russell,
That the defendant knew of the uninsulated condition of its wire strung on the poles some 20 feet above the ground, or of the wire running from the transmission line into the transformer box just under the line, does not charge it with notice that a trespasser would enter a situation of danger by climbing the pole and taking hold of the line. If the uninsulated wire be regarded as a defect, “[t]here is a difference between notice of defect and knowledge of danger.”
Bray v. Cross,
Conclusion.
The sustaining of a general demurrer to each of the counts in the petition was proper. Additional authorities supporting this conclusion are:
Augusta R. Co. v. Andrews,
“I't appear [s] that the plaintiff placed himself in a position of peril by his own acts, and that the defendant company could not reasonably have foreseen that its alleged acts of negligence would concur with those of the plaintiff so as to injure him. . .”
Hornsby v. Haverty Furn. Co.,
What is held here in no way detracts from the rule that those who engage in the production and distribution of electricity must exercise a high degree of care, commensurate with the danger involved, to prevent injuries to others by the electricity.
Judgment affirmed.
