22 Ga. App. 474 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1918
John W. Scott, a boy 10 years old, brought suit by his next friend against the Rome Railway and Light Company, alleging that while picking blackberries in' an open woodland, he stumbled, and in the act of falling threw up his hand and caught a wire hanging near the ground, which connected with a main wire used by ¡the defendant for the purpose of conveying electric current which it generated, and thereby seriously and permanently injured his hand. The undisputed evidence showed that the wire caught by the plaintiff was originally placed in position by an individual user óf electricity, and was entirely constructed and maintained
We think, under the testimony, the court properly awarded a nonsuit. The following rule is laid down in The Law of Electricity, by Curtis’ (1915),’ p. 618: “There seems to be some1 conflict of -authority on the question whether an electric company is .under any duty as to the safety of appliances owned and maintained by its customer but through which it conducts its current. The weight of authority -supports the view that, if the appliances of the cus
Judgment affirmed.