69 S.E. 399 | N.C. | 1910
Action to recover damages for alleged negligent killing of the intestate. Verdict and judgment for plaintiff, and defendant excepted and appealed.
The facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion of the Court. On careful consideration of the record and the exceptions noted, we find no reversible error to defendant's prejudice. The evidence showed that on 4 July, 1908, the Bratton Amusement Company was conducting a moving picture show under a tent erected on an open and vacant lot in the town, being an exposed and public place, and the defendant, under a contract with the company, had installed the wires, and was supplying the electricity for carrying on the enterprise. That *359 the wire conducting the electricity to the tent passed over a path in which numbers of persons were accustomed to move, and had been negligently placed or allowed to sag so that persons going along the path could easily reach it, some of the witnesses saying it was so low that one would have to bend his body to pass under it, and just at this point the wire was uninsulated for a space of a foot or (440) more. That the intestate, an inexperienced boy of 17 years of age, living with his mother and doing work on the farm in passing along the path caught hold of the wire and received a shock that killed him. One witness who saw it, speaking to the occurrence, said: "We saw him raise up the wire as if to go under; the wire was down about where it would strike his forehead if he hadn't raised it up, and he put up his hands and raised up the wire, and he fell down against the engine, got up on his knees and fell down again. The fellow that was with him asked him if the wire did that to him, and he never spoke a word; he just lay still there on the ground.
"Q. Were the wires naked where he put his hands on it? A. Yes, sir.
"Q. About how much of it was bare? A. About a foot.
"Q. Where was the wire, with reference to the path? A. The wire was right over the path."
The town having engaged in a business enterprise, supplying electricity for a profit, can not avail itself of the position that it was at the time, in the exercise of governmental power conferred for the public benefit. Speaking to this question, in Fisher v. New Bern,
It was chiefly urged for error that the record did not disclose that the summons had been introduced in evidence, and the Court having held inGulledge v. R. R.,
It was further contended that his Honor below should not have admitted over defendant's objection an exclamation of the intestate as he caught hold of the wire, fell and expired, and this on the ground that dying declarations are only permissible in cases of homicide. The position is sound in the abstract. McKelvey on Evidence (2 Ed.), 326. But it obtains when the declaration in question is competent only as a dying declaration and strictly offered as such. In the present case and so far as it was relevant to the issue, the exclamation was admissible as part of the res gestae, Bedsole v. R. R.,
It was further objected that the court allowed a question tending to show that the wire had been wrapped and properly insulated after the killing; a line of inquiry, as a general rule, held incompetent with us, as in Myers v. Lumber Company,
Again it was argued that the evidence offered by defendant as to a hard thunder storm about the time of the killing was not given consideration. It does not appear that the storm was likely to have charged these wires. There was no evidence indicative that a shock was anywhere received, nor do we find that the attention of the court was called to this testimony by any prayer for instruction, and if it had been, the better rulings are to the effect that in a case of this character or on similar facts, an injured person is entitled to insist on reasonable care and protection from atmospheric as well as artificial electricity. Garforth v. Tel. Tel.Company,
It was contended further that counsel for plaintiff in arguing his case to the jury was allowed to read to them the facts in Fisher v. NewBern,
We are of opinion as stated that no reversible error appears in the record.
No error.
Cited: Bank v. Duffy,