Wе approve as sound the following rules of law, which are well settled by the most authoritative decisions in this country:
2. “Insufficient оr worn insulation is worse than none, for sometimes it gives an appearance of security when, in fact, it is as dangerous as a bare wire.” Id.
4. The obligation of the electric company to insulate is not absolute, but alternative, in its nature. “Either the wire must be insulated, or it must be so located as to be, comparatively speaking, harmless.” Id. § 511.
(These last two propositions are, of course, to be-qualified by the nearness or remoteness of the tree with respect to human beings, and their natural and probable associations therewith.) 4
The merit of the fourth cqunt of the complaint is rested upon the assumption that defendant is guilty of a breach of duty to employes of the telephone company in maintaining and operating а wire, carrying a dangerous current of electricity, in such proximity to the telephone wires that their employes are likely to come in contact therewith while in the proper dischаrge of their duties. But it is clear that the maintenance and operation of such a wire by defendant is wrongful only when the dangerous proximity complained of is caused by defendant. •
So, we think that the fifth count is also defective and subject to the demurrer, in that it shows no facts which would render the act complained of, viz. “causing said wire to be charged with a current of electricity which was dangerous to human life at said point,” a breach of duty to the employés of the telephone company. The only duty with respect to the use of such wires — which is a necessity in modem industrial and municipal life — is to place them where thеy are normally inaccessible to the unwary, and to guard them by the best insulation, or other practicable protective devices, from dangerous contact with those who may neverthеless be expected to be exposed thereto. In Consolidated, etc., Co. v. People’s, etc., Co.,
Under the testimony in this case, the instructions in question were, in effect, general affirmative charges for the plaintiff on the issue of contributory negligence, and their giving' was prejudicial error.
As the case must be tried again, and' the *226 evidence may be different, we do not undertake to pass judgment on the refusal of the trial judge to instruct for defendant on thе issue of contributory negligence.
For the errors pointed out the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
