The defendant contends that the petition does not set forth a cause, of action because its averments show no breach of duty by the defendant owed to the plaintiff’s son. In support of this contention the defendant cites
Smith
v.
Ga. Power Co.,
43
Ga. App.
210 (
The allegations of the petition clearly allege the breach of a duty owed by the defendant to the plaintiff’s son.
Welch
v.
City of Camilla,
86
Ga. App.
609 (
The defendant recognizes in the brief presented to> this court that general allegations are sufficient as against a general demurrer. It insists that in this case the general allegations are mere conclusions of the pleader and insufficient against special demurrer. The court’s attention is called to the special demurrers that attack certain allegations of the petition charging negligence on the part of the defendant. The principle is recognized but is not applicable here. The petition set forth the
*387
evidential facts upon which each act of negligence imputed to the defendant is based, and the facts alleged, if true, constitute negligence. The petitioner’s averments show causal connection between the acts of negligence charged and the fatal injury of plaintiff’s son. Thus the petition sufficiently shows the'defendant’s negligence was the proximate cause of the boy’s death. The defendant by way of protesting the insufficiency of the petition insists that one who maintains a power line is not an insurer of the safety of others who may come in contact with it. As authority for the position, the holding in
Darden
v.
Mayor &c. of Washington,
35
Ga. App.
777 (1) (
The defendant takes the position in the brief filed here that, the plaintiff’s own contributory negligence proximately contributing to the death of her child, her right of recovery for the child’s death is barred.
There is authority for the contention that where a parent permits the child to be exposed to imminent danger, or fails when the child is in the parent’s presence to warn him of. an obvious impending peril a recovery for the death of the child may be barred.
In
Atlanta & Charlotte Air-Line Ry. Co.
v.
Gravitt,
93
Ga.
369 (3) (
A similar principle is pronounced ini
Stamps
v.
Newton County,
8
Ga. App. 229
(2) (
These cases are not applicable here. The petition that we now consider does not reveal that the child was in the plaintiff mother’s presence or was of such tender age as to ordinarily require her constant care.
There is no allegation from which it can be fairly inferred that the mother was aware that the child intended to come in close proximity to the wires or would be in danger of coming ini contact with them. Nor can it be inferred from the averments of the petition that the mother was chargeable with knowledge of the high voltage of the wires and the consequent danger that lurked in them. She did not necessarily know of the dangerous character of the wires simply because they were uninsulated. As a general rule a person of ordinary intelligence, a layman in the field of electricity is not credited with information concerning the dangerous character of wire placed in a position or strung at heights which indicate the wire is harmless.
The very fact that the defendant power company strung the wires in an uninsulated state, one within 10 feet and the other 12 feet of the ground across, the barnyard of another indicated that the wires were harmless.
The court held in Lamar Electric Membership Corp. v. Car roll, 89 Ga. App. 440, 453, supra, that “there is nothing in the *389 petition to indicate that the plaintiff was aware that the wires were not insulated, or that they were of high voltage, or could apprehend for any other reason, that, if one of the pipes which he employed in his work should come in contact with them, he would be injured. It is a matter of common knowledge that a great many wires used, for instance, in telephonic communication are not charged with electric current of such voltage as would inflict injury upon a person in like circumstance. Merely seeing the wires strung over the property would not put the plaintiff on notice of a dangerous condition.”
The same pronouncement is found in
Georgia Power Co.
v.
Leonard,
187
Ga.
608, 615 (
Exception is taken to the trial court’s overruling certain special demurrers. The only argument made in this court concerning these grounds is, “Much of the contention above has application to the special demurrers; therefore, in order to avoid repetition, we are submitting the special demurrers on the basis of their *390 context, without further argument, yet expressly not abandoning them.”
A careful examination of the special demurrers overruled by the court reveals that the trial court’s ruling in respect to them was correct.
The trial judge did not err in sustaining the demurrer directed to the averment alleging that the defendant was negligent in “maintaining and operating the power lines described in the petition at a height lower than that specified for this type of installation in the National Safety Code.”
In the 1958 supplement of
There is no law or rule of any commission of this State empowered to. formulate rules controlling the installation and* maintenance of power lines requiring the installation of power lines in conformity with the National Safety Code. Thus the code does not prescribe a standard of prudence recognized by the laws of this State. A failure to- comply with the code does not constitute negligence per se.
The code did not furnish a standard of ordinary care because it merely represents the opinions of witnesses, not sworn in the cause. To permit it to be pleaded and admitted in evidence would preclude the exercise of the valuable right of cross-examination of the witnesses who compiled the code.
*391 What is written,' here is not to be construed as a pronouncement that an expert witness may not. predicate his opinion upon information gained from authentic and authoritative books as well as upon his own experience in the field of science and endeavor to which his testimony relates.
Judgment on main bill affirmed. Judgment on cross-bill affirmed.
