27 Ga. App. 509 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1921
1. While the determination of questions of negligence lies peculiarly within the province of the jury, and in the exercise of this function the question as to what constitutes the proximate cause of the injury complained of may he directly involved as one of the essential elements and disputed issues in the ascertainment of what negligence, as well as whose negligence, the injury is properly attributable to; and while it is also true that the mere fact that the injury would not and could not have resulted by reason of the de
2. The mere fact that the defendant might have allowed his line of telephone wire to touch the limb of a tree cannot be taken to have as a natural and probable consequence that some other .person would fell a tree across the properly strung line of electric wires stretched six feet above the telephone wire, so as to bring the two lines in contact, and by such a concurrence of events complete a short circuit, or that such intervening agency could have been reasonably foreseen or anticipated by the defendant.
Judgment affirmed.