Appellee owned a farm and store at Plantersville, Mississippi, and in February, 1947, obtained electric service from appellant for his store. Appellant owned and operated a main line and from this main line it ran a service line across appellee’s land to his store. This
Pursuant to these agreements Southland Oils entered upon appellee’s land and installed the facilities mentioned. They were placed exactly where appellee directed, and one of the gasoline storage tanks was placed directly underneath the service wires which ran to appellee’s store. On May 1, 1948, appellee purchased all of said storage facilities from Southland Oils and continued to operate the bulk station plant until the same, tоgether with the store and stock of merchandise, was destroyed by fire and explosion on October 6, 1948.
The evidence for appellee is to the effect that on the storage tank underneath the wires there was a vent pipe which turned downward and that the lower wire was, according to two witnesses, from three to five inches therefrom, and according to another witness from eight to ten inches therefrom. The evidence shows without dispute that the wires were new when installed and were properly insulated and that this insulation would ordinarily be effective for a period of from ten to fifteen years. The evidence further shows that no spark can emanate from any of the wires so as to ignite the gasoline vapors from the tank or vent pipe unless the insulation is removed from the wire and unless it comes in contаct either with another wire from which the insulation is removed or with the vent pipe or metal tank. One of appellee’s employees, who went daily upon the tanks to measure by gauge the amount of gasoline therein, testified in his behalf and frankly stated that he had never noticed anything wrong with the wires. There is not one word of еvidence in the record showing that the insulation had been removed from any of the wires nor that any of the wires had ever come in contact with each
As against the mentioned possibilities appellant produced the testimony of Mr. R. H. Park who lived about one-tenth of a mile from the storage tanks and of his sоn who lived about one thousand feet from the tanks. Mr. Park testified that he had not retired for the night when he observed a fire on the ground in front of the tanks; there had been no explosion at that time; he went to the home of his son and awakened him and the son arose and also observed the fire on the ground; the son dressed and the two of them approached the fire but, sensing the likelihood of an explosion, they were afraid to go near the fire and stopped at a barn. When they reached the barn the fire was then burning the wooden platform about the tanks, and subsequent to that the explosion occurred. The son, Bill Park, testified to the same еffect, and none of this testimony is disputed in any particular, nor was either of these witnesses impeached in any manner. The first that any of appellee’s witnesses knew of the fire was when the explosion occurred; they knew nothing as to what occurred before the explosion.
Appellee introduced in evidenсe the National Electric Code published by the National Board of Eire Underwrit-' ers wherein it is provided that where service lines do not carry more than 300 volts of electricity there should be a
“But the great weight of opinion, from so many of the able courts оf the country, to the effect that an inference essential to the establishment of the cause of action may not be based upon another inference, admonishes us, first, that, in declining to recognize that rule, so stated, in this jurisdiction, we must, in allowing inference upon inference, do so with the firm limitation that the probabilities thereby permitted to be entertained are safe and dependable probabilities, measured by legal standards, for they involve more than the simple and generally unimportant affairs of everyday life; they involve in court procedure the liberty and property of others. Obviously every inference drawn from another inference produces a result wherein the quality of probability becomes weaker and soon or later a stage is reached when serious doubt arises whether, under legal standards, the ultimate inference in the chain of inferences is a legally safe and dependable probability or has become only a mоre or less strong possibility, and, when that stage is reached, the proof is insufficient, so far as concerns judgments at law.
“The second admonition is that, in allowing inference upon inference, we should do so no further than the reasonable necessities of the ease, in the interest of justice, require. Fortunately, in nearly all сases, particularly in civil cases, the necessities of the case do not require that the chain of inferences shall be lengthened, one link to another, through such an extent as to present as a practical question the problem whether the chain of inferences has become too long and therеfore too weak to hold; for in nearly every case it will be found that one or more of the essential facts sought to be established by inference is or are capable of proof by direct, positive, or by demonstrative evidence, and thereupon there comes into play the rule that, where a party, who has the burden of proof, has the power to produce evidence of a more explicit, direct, and satisfactory character than that which he does introduce and relies on, he must introduce that more explicit, direct, and satisfactory proof, or else suffer the presumption that, if the more sаtisfactory evidence had been given, it would have been detrimental to him and would have laid open deficiencies in, and objections to, his case, which the more obscure and uncertain evidence did not disclose. 22 C. J. p. 115; 23 C. J. p. 40; 10 R. C. L. p. 885; 9 Ency. Ev. pp. 959, 960; 1 Jones, Com. Ev. (2 Ed.), pp. 185, 186; Wigmore, Ev. (2 Ed.), p. 585; Clifton v. United States, 4 How. 242 ,11 L. Ed. 957 .”
Appellee’s whole case is bottomed upon the charge that there was an explosion which created or caused the fire with its resulting damage. As to this charge we revert to the testimony of Mr. R. H. Park and his son to the effect that the fire was burning on the ground in front of the tanks long before there was an explosion. That evidence is undisputed and neither of these witnesses was impeached in any manner. Upon their testimony appellee’s case must fail. We have repeatedly held that where the testimony of a witness is uncontradicted and he is not impeached in some manner known to the law and is not contradicted by the physical facts and circumstances it must be аccepted as true. Stewart v. Coleman & Co.,
We are fully mindful of the rule that negligence may be established by circumstantial evidence and that the causal connection between an agency and the injury need not be shown by direct evidence, but this rule is qualified to the extent that the circumstances shown must be such as to take the case out of the realm of conjecture and place it within the field of legitimate inference.
The record here shows nothing more, at best, than a remote possibility as to the origin of the fire and that possibility is written out of the picture by the testimony оf Park and his son. But even in the absence of that testimony we still have nothing’ left but a bare possibility and we are faced with the rule so often declared by' this Court that verdicts must rest upon reasonable probabilities and not upon mere possibilities, and the probabilities must be such as to show not only negligence but that such negligence was a proximate contributing cause of the damage.
In the case of Illinois Central Railroad Company v. Cathy,
The Cathy case was cited with approval in Kramer Service, Inc. v. Wilkins,
Reluctant as we are to disturb the verdict of the jury we cannot close our eyes to the well-established principle that verdicts must rest upon reasonable probabilities and not upon mere possibilities. Since no reasonable proba
Reversed and judgment bere.
