135 Ky. 611 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
The Bowling Green Gaslight Company furnished the electric power for a private electric light line extending beyond the city limits of Bowling Green, to supply some suburban residents with lights for their dwellings. One of the wires got down and parted in two places. It hung from the poles and partly on a fence or tree, so that it was sagging some six or eight
This suit was by the personal representatives of Lewis to recover for his death, on the ground that the gas company was negligent in not looking after the insulation and safety of the wire, and in turning into it such a dangerous voltage of electricity without knowing that the wire was in safe condition along the highway where people might be expected to come in contact with it. The trial court gave the jury a peremptory instruction to find for the defendant at the close of the evidence in the case. The correctness of that ruling is the question presented here for review.
The evidence was' that the wire in question was broken at one or two places, and was hanging down as stated, and that on the night previous to the death of Mr. Lewis a witness saw sparks and flames emitted from the wire at a point where on the next morning it was discovered to be in two. The wire was without insulation in many places; it had rotted or broken off, and had not been repaired. That condition had existed for some months. The wires (two of them constituting a circuit) were strung on opposite sides of the posts along the highway, attached to the posts by glass brackets, and were thus placed 8 to 12 inches apart. They were so close as that, when they or one of them became loose, they were in danger of swinging together and touching, creating a short circMt. This would melt the wires, letting them fall to the ground. Appellee had not inspected this line for defects since it was built some two years before, and had not caused it to be repaired. Under these facts we think the case was one for the jury, both as to the company’s negligence, and the decedent’s contributory negligence. The company could not escape its responsibility as the dispenser through the public ■ streets and roads of such a stealthy, deadly force as an electric current of such
. As to the plea of contributory negligence:'Ordinarily, when the facts are admitted, and where there is no conflict in the evidence, it is a question of law whether they-constitute contributory negligence; but it is not always so. Although the facts may be admitted, still if it be -a question whether the act of the plaintiff at the time was such as an ordinarily prudent person would have done under the same circumstances, the jury ought to be permitted to say whether, under the-circumstances, it- was or was not negligence, but for which-the defendant’s negligence would have been harmless. If. the act relied on is admitted and is clearly negligent, or is clearly- not
^ It is claimed-that the insulation is not a protection to human life when the voltage is so high as • was that in use in this instance, but there was evidence to.the contrary of that contention. We think the whole matter should have gone to the jury under the usual instructions in such cases as to the care exacted of the gas company and of the decedent, and as to what would constitute negligence in each.
Judgment reversed and remanded for a new trial.