72 N.J.L. 276 | N.J. | 1905
The opinion of the court was delivered by
William C. Guinn, a lad thirteen years of age, was killed by contact with a guy wire charged with electricity. The wire was of a character used for telephone construction— copper wire of a tensile strength of two hundred and fifty pounds. It was attached to a pole on which were strung wires of the defendant alone. There was no proof except by inference that the defendant erected or owned the pole, or had attached the wire. In answer to an interrogatory, the defendant stated that the wire had been inspected May 27th or 28th, 1904, about three weeks before the injury. No testi
The injury was caused by the guy wire breaking and falling on an electric light wire belonging to another company. The broken end fell in the grass in a field belonging to Gulick. Across this field people were accustomed to travel without objection, but as far as appears without other right. The boy’s body was found still in contact with the guy wire shortly after the shock. It does not appear that he had any right to be on Gulick’s property except such as may be inferred from the facts stated. The contention of the defendant is that it was under no duty to the decedent for the reason that he was a trespasser on Gulick’s property, or at best a mere licensee.
The liability of the defendant rests upon the fact that it was maintaining wires which might become charged with a deadly current of electricity. New York and New Jersey Telephone Co. v. Bennett, 33 Vroom 742; Brooks v. Consolidated Gas Co., 41 Id. 211.
The duty to exercise care is established as to travelers upon the highway and employes of the defendant or of another company who in the exercise of their rights are likely to come in contact with the wires, and of persons who are lawfully in a place of proximity to the wires. The question presented in this case is whether the duty exists also as to third persons who are not at the time in the exercise of any legal right. The principle underlying the case is stated by Chief Justice Beasley, in Van Winkle v. American Steam Boiler Co., 23 Vroom 240 (at p. 247), to be that in all cases in which any person undertakes the performance of an act which, if not done with care and skill, will be highly dangerous to the persons or lives of one or more persons, known or unknown, the law, ipso facto, imposes as a public duty the obligation to exercise such care and skill.
The test of the defendant’s liability to a particular person is whether injury to him ought reasonably to have been
The case differs from one where a trespasser or licensee seeks to recover of the landowner. A landowner may in fact reasonably anticipate an invasion of his property, but in law he is entitled to assume that he will not be interfered with. His right to protect his possession and to use his property is paramount. It is these considerations which led this court to deny the liability of the defendant in the turn-table cases. Turess v. New York, Susquehanna, and Western Railroad Co., 32 Vroom 314; Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Co. v. Reich, Id. 635, and in Friedman v. Snare & Driest Co., 42 Id. 605.
The general rule is that a person is liable for those results of his negligence which are reasonably to be anticipated; the exemption of the landowner from liability as to trespassers and licensees is necessary to secure him the beneficial use of his land, but no reason exists for extending this exemption to the case where the rights of the defendant have not been interfered with.
There is no proof that the defendant had any right to maintain the pole and wire, but even if it had the deceased is not shown to have interfered with the defendant’s rights.. The right to maintain the pole and wire did not involve the right to have the wire swing loose or occupy another portion of the field. Whoever interfered with the pole and wire in place might be a trespasser, but he would not be a trespasser upon the defendant’s rights if he came in contact with the wire elsewhere.
The judge was asked to charge that the jury must be satisfied by the greater weight of the testimony that the defendant company was negligent or the verdict must be for the defendant. He charged that it must appear by the weight of probabilities that the defendant’s servants put the guy wire there. He then left it to the jury to say whether the defendant was negligent in doing something which it did, or in leaving undone something which it should have done.
Tn a case where the testimony was in conflict the defendant would be entitled to have this request charged, but in the present case there was no conflict of testimony, and the only question was whether the jury would draw an inference of negligence from undisputed facts. Under the decision of this court in Newark Electric Co. v. Ruddy, 33 Vroom 505; affirmed, 34 Id. 357, in the absence of explanation by the defendant of the cause of the breaking of the wire, no other inference was open. The present case is even stronger, for here there was proof that the wire was of less tensile strength, though of greater durability, than the wire ordinarily used for that purpose.
It was permissible for the jury to infer that the omission of a guard between the electric light wire and the guy wire was an act of negligence. Rowe v. New York and New Jersey Telephone Co., 37 Vroom 19.
Although the danger arose after the construction of the telephone line, and was due to the running of the electric light wires below the guy wire, the care required of the telephone company changed with the changed circumstances. Rowe v. New York and New Jersey Telephone Co., supra.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.