55 S.C. 403 | S.C. | 1899
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The foregoing actions, though separate and distinct, involve practically the same questions, and will be disposed of together, for the plaintiff, Miles, owned the building in which was stored the goods of the plaintiff, Setzler, which building and stock of goods were destroyed by the same fire on the night of the 20th of June, 1897, which fire both plaintiffs alleged was communicated through one of the telegraph wires which the defendant carelessly and negligently permitted and allowed to become loose on one of the insulators attached to' the telegraph pole just in front of the storehouse of the plaintiff, Miles, thereby causing said telegraph wire to- swag and fall upon a frame attached to the front of said storehouse, and convey a current or currents of electricity by which said storehouse and stock of goods were burned and destroyed, to the damage of the plaintiff, Miles, $300, and to the damage of the plaintiff, Setzler, $500. The defendant’s answer set up that it was authorized under an act of Congress, passed in 1866, and subsequent amendments thereto, to construct its lines of telegraph upon highways and post roads of the United States, of which highways and post roads, it claims the road in Lexington County, State of South Carolina, wherein its telegraph line was located, in front of the storehouse of the plaintiff, Miles, to be, and that the said defendant, the Postal Telegraph Cable Company, was operating under the interstate commerce provision of the United States Constitution, having its lines of telegraph leading from other States to the west of South Carolina through said State of South Carolina, to other States on the east of said State of South Carolina. It denied all the allegations of fact embodied in the complaints. It set out two other affirmative^ defenses: First. That the fire which occasioned the loss to plaintiffs was the act of God. Second. That plaintiffs were guilty of contributory negligence by reason of building such storehouse so close to defendant’s telegraph line, that such struc
to that cause (because the defendant^ carelessly and negligently allowed one of its wires attached to the telegraph pole in front of plaintiff’s store to become detached from a defective insulator, and to swag and fall upon the frame in front of the plaintiff’s store, and thereby conveyed a current of electricity into the plaintiff’s store, which caused it to ignite and burn down), or was the fire due to an act of God ? And in determining this issue, you will determine whether the storm caused the wire to break, by reason of the fact that the store was on fire, and heated the same and caused it to break and become defective, or whether the wire, by reason of the defects complained of, caused the store to ignite’ — in that, in using the language herein quoted, his Honor charged upon the facts.” We understand that in this charge of the Circuit Judge he merely stated the issue between these contending parties, and that in so stating the issue, the attention of the jury was called to the requirements of the law in correctly determining such issue by the testimony. • The Circuit Judge did not undertake to state the testimony in that part of his charge here construed. The plaintiff contended in his complaint that the fire which consumed his storehouse was communicated through a defective telegraph wire, which led a current or currents of electricity thereto. The defendant did not deny in its answer that the storehouse and the stock of goods therein were destroyed by fire, but insisted that the fire was communicated to the store by?' an act of God, for which it was in no wise responsible. Such being the case, and especially in view of the requests of the defendant to the Circuit Judg’e for his charge to the jury ■ — -which were charged — we do not think that the Circuit Judge charged upon the facts, in violation of the mandate of the Constitution. This exception is overruled.
The fourth, fifth and sixth exceptions are as follows: Fourth. Because his Honor refused to charge: “7th. I further charge you that the law does not require impossibilities of any person, natural or artificial, nor does it require that the defendant should have ready for service at every moment and at every point of exposure, an adequate force to overcome a sudden fracture of wire or any other like casualty in the shortest possible time. All that it can be required to do in this connection is to maintain an efficient system of oversight, and to be prepared with competent and sufficient force ready to furnish, within a reasonable time, a proper remedy for all such casualties, reasonable ground to anticipate might occur.” Fifth. Because his Honor refused to' charge: “8th. I further charge you that if you find that the wire fell from the defendant’s pole, the defendant was entitled to a reasonable time after the falling of the wire to repair or remove it, and if the jury find that the injury to the complainant occurred before the expiration of such reasonable time, then the plaintiff is not entitled to recover any
It is the judgment of this Court, that each of the judgments appealed from in the two causes 'heard together in this Court be affirmed, and that the clerk of this Court send a remittitur down in each entitled action.