Plaintiff brought this action for personal injuries against defendant, Georgia Power Company, on the ground that defendant was negligent in maintaining its electric wires in such a manner as to cause injury to plaintiffs decedent. A jury returned a verdict for plaintiff in the amount claimed, $25,000, and judgment was entered thereon. Defendant moved for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict as well as for new trial. The motion for new trial was abandoned and the trial court entered an order overruling the motion for judgment n.o.v. from which plaintiff appeals.
Testimony from plaintiffs witnesses at trial showed that plaintiffs decedent and Henry Morrissette were preparing to raise a television antenna outside the house of Morrissette. The two men were standing approximately seven to ten feet from the side of the house and directly under the utility lines of defendant. Plaintiffs witnesses estimated the total length of the antenna to be 20 to 30 feet. There were no eyewitnesses to what actually happened (Morrissette died instantly *875 from electrocution and plaintiffs decedent, who was injured by the electricity, died before the trial from other causes), but witnesses, who were either inside the Morrissette house or on the front porch, testified as to a large flash of light and sparks from the direction of the power line, to their left and rear. Rushing out to the side of the house they found Morrissette lying on the ground dead, and plaintiffs decedent severely burned on the right foot. Beside them lay a television antenna, which had burned spots on it. Plaintiffs witnesses testified that there were two wires overhead, one running directly under the other and that there was also a service line that came into the house on the same side and from a pole to which the other two lines were attached. The service wire was insulated, but the two high tension or transmission line wires were not. Plaintiffs witnesses estimated the height of the uninsulated wires from the point on the ground where the two men stood to the bottom wire to be 19 feet and to the top wire 20 feet. Plaintiffs decedent and Morrissette lived next door to each other, and both houses had been served by defendant’s electricity for a number of years.
The defendants’ witnesses testified that the utility lines were placed across the Morrissette property in 1956 by right of easement granted to them from Mrs. Cox, who had lived in the house since 1952. The power lines in question ran vertically (one over the other), the top line carrying 7,200 volts of electrical current and the bottom line being a neutral ground wire. Measurements made by defendants’ witnesses showed that from the approximate point on the ground where plaintiffs decedent was standing, the lower wire was 21 feet 9 inches above the ground and the top wire was 24 feet 5 inches high. At its closest point the primary wire passed laterally 7 feet 7 inches from the side of the house and vertically 16 feet from the roof. Defendant’s expert witnesses testified that the best possible insulation for the primary wire was air space, that is surrounding the wire with sufficient space so as not to interfere with the public; that the insulation on the service wire was not insulation from touching by the public but from touching of the wires by the other wires within the bundle; that the minimum height *876 standards in the electrical industry for an uninsulated 7,200 volt wire was 15 feet above ground in an open field, but in areas where there was pedestrian or vehicular traffic, 20 feet was the minimum height; that the minimum requirements in the industry as to clearance of a 7,200 volt wire from a building was three feet from the side of the structure and eight feet above it; and that the lines in question complied with the National Electric Safety Code.
There was no evidence of warning signs on the poles or lines or anywhere near the house in question.
Both at the end of plaintiffs case and at the end of all the evidence, defendant moved for a directed verdict, which was denied on each occasion. Held:
1. Facts may be proved by circumstantial evidence as well as by direct evidence.
Old Colony Ins. Co. v. Dressel,
2. The use of uninsulated high tension wires by a power company in the transmission of electricity is not negligence.
Crosby v. Savannah Electric &c. Co.,
3. Defendant contends that it is entitled to a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, because the plaintiff failed to prove defendant was negligent and *877 because the plaintiffs decedent was himself negligent. (We do not reach the issue of the decedent’s negligence or assumption of risk since we reverse on other grounds.)
The standard of care in the maintenance of electrically charged wires is that which a reasonably prudent man would exercise under similar circumstances and is therefore ordinary care.
Savannah Elec. Co. v. Bell,
Ordinarily, foreseeability is a question of fact for the jury.
Hicks v. M. H. A.,
The question of foreseeability in the utility line situation was dealt with in
Georgia Power Co. v. Carden,
In affirming that decision the Georgia Supreme Court stated: "In our present mode of living in Georgia, in a society in which the transmission of electricity is an absolute necessity for our economic, social and cultural well-being, we hold that the mere maintenance, without more, of high tension lines at the minimum height shown by the evidence in this case does not create any risks within the scope of the duty owed as hereinbefore defined. In short, the mere maintenance, without more, of high tension wires at a minimum height of twenty-four feet four inches above a traveled roadway is not actionable negligence.”
Carden v. Georgia Power Co.,
The facts in the present case, even though they involve an individual not on a construction site at the time of his injury and do not involve lines over a roadway, are nevertheless governed by the same principle of law set forth in Carden because the common, essential question is the defendant’s duty of care to the plaintiff based on foreseeability of plaintiffs coming into contact with defendant’s wires.
Those cases cited by the plaintiff,
Welch v. City of Camilla,
Judgment reversed.
