The parties in this case will be referred to as they were designated in the district court. Arcado Kelley and wife, as plaintiffs, sued Texas Utilities Company, alleging that through the latter’s negligence their son, E. J. Kelley, was killed, thereby causing them to incur damages in the sum of $30,000. From the record it appears that on June 11, 1936, the deceased boy, who was twelve years old, accompanied by another boy nine years of age, were grazing some cattle on the west side of a road in Gaines county about a mile and a half from the plaintiffs’ home. They began playing on the west side of the road. They twisted together several pieces of wire to a length of about 30 feet, tied a stone to one end and a can to the other, crossed the road, and threw the stone over a high-voltage transmission wire of defendant. This transmission wire carried in excess of 6,000 volts. The wire with which the boys were playing came to rest over the middle or second line maintained by defendant and conducted the electricity from that wire into the body of the boy to such an extent as to cause his immediate death. The place at which all of this took place was, according to the evidence, on a- road west of the town of Sea-graves, in Gaines county. The road was still being used to some extent as a public road, though most persons used another and newer highway a short distance away. Defendant’s wire, with which the wire thrown by decedent came in contact, was uninsulated. The only evidence introduced as to the efficiency of insulation of outdoor wires carrying in excess of 600 volts was that they afforded no protection; and that in the instant case insulation would not have saved the boy, but that he would have been killed instantly. Under the uncontradicted evidence it was necessary to carry a voltage of about -6,000 volts over the line in question to effect service between Seagraves and Seminole. The place at which this tragedy took place was on a road that was little frequented, and was not in proximity to any school or playground or settlement at -which children might be expected to gather. There were ño posted notices or other signs to warn of the danger of coming in contact with defendant’s wires. Plaintiff Arcado Kelley expressed the opinion that defendant’s wires sagged to about 12 feet above the ground after the accident. He testified, however, that he did not know anything “about it before.” He also testified that he had warned the boy that the wires were dangerous. The manager of defendant testified that he made a measurement to ascertain the height of the wire at the particular point under investigation, using a cloth
Opinion.
In addition to urging that the wire in question constituted an attractive nuisance and that, therefore, there was liability upon the part of defendant, the plaintiffs insisted that defendant was negligent in permitting the wire to sag to a height short of 22 feet above the ground, and in failing to place warning signs or signals giving notice of the danger. They also insisted that defendant had no right to maintain its wires along the highway, and that such maintenance constituted a violation of article 784 of the Penal Code, basing this contention upon the theory that article 1436, R.C.S., did not grant the right to string power lines along a road, contending that the phrase “over and across” did not include the idea that the right granted extended to maintaining power lines above and “along” public roads outside of cities. From the view that we take of the case it will not be necessary to express an opinion as to this last stated contention.
Unless a person of ordinary prudence, in the light of the surrounding facts and circumstances, would redsonably have anticipated that a boy upon the public road would be injured by the power line maintained at the height and in the place that this line was maintained unless warning signs were placed, the court was correct in holding that the proximate cause of the boy’s death was not the alleged negligence. In view of repeated decisions in this and other states, the statement of the proposition contains its own answer. An ordinarily prudent person looking at the surroundings as they appeared prior to the time that E. J. Kelley was killed would not reasonably have expected that any person would make contact with the exposed wires in the manner that the deceased boy did. His death was not occasioned through his use of the highway as a highway. The alleged offending wire was not over the generally traveled part of the road. The Supreme Court, in Brush Electric Light & Power Co. v. Lefevre,
This holding is in harmony also with the law as declared by courts in other jurisdictions: Green v. West Penn. Rys. Co.,
The present defendant was not required to foresee the “unforeseeable.”
The state of facts in the instant case does not reflect a condition under which plaintiffs can recover under the “attractive nuisance” doctrine. Simonton v. Citizens’ Electric Light Co.,
In harmony with the decision of our Supreme Court declaring the law of the state upon the questions involved, we cannot say that the court erred in instructing a verdict in'favor of defendant.
Appellants’ assignments of error are, therefore, overruled, and judgment is affirmed.
