Mayfield Water & Light Co. v. Webb's Admr.

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Hobson —

Reversing.

The Mayfield Water & Light Company maintains a system of electric lights in Mayfield. It erected along College Cross street a line of poles 18 feet high, *398and at the top of the poles on a cross-arm it placed two electric wires 20 inches apart and 18 feet from the ground. After this had been done, the Home Telephone Company put up a line of poles along the street 30 feet high, and on these poles it placed wire cables containing its telephone wires. At the intersection of Sixth street, the telephone poles turned in Sixth street, and to keep its pole straight at this point it attached two guy wires to the top of the pole and ran them out to a deadman, or log, buried in the ground; the guy wires running down from the top of the pole at an angle of about 45 degrees being about four feet apart at the ground and coming together at the top of the pole. The guy wires passed in about 8 inches of the electric wire. The children of the neighborhood would hold on to the upper guy wire with their hands and walk on the lower wire, and then slide down, using the wires to play upon. Charles M. Webb, a little boy 11 years old, was playing upon the wires in this way, when his head touched the electric wire, thus completing the circuit, and he was instantly killed. This suit was brought against both the electric light company and the telephone company to recover for his death. A recovery was had in the circuit court for $1,000, and the defendants appeal.

There was proof on the trial that the insulation on the electric light wire was defective, and there was also proof that, whatever the condition of the insulation might have been, the result would have been the same when the little boy’s head touched it while he was standing on the other wire which ran into the ground; the proof being that the insulation will not protect from injury when such a high current of electricity is carried as was used on this wire. The ground upon which the recovery is rested is that in *399the construction of the wires they were made attractive and inviting to children, and that the defendants were guilty of negligence in so maintaining the wires and permitting them to remain in this dangerous and unprotected condition. This court has in a number of cases held electric light companies responsible where it permitted live wires to hang in the street. Thus, in City of Owensboro v. York’s Adm’r, 117 Ky. 294, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 1397, 77 S. W. 1130, a little boy 12 years old discovered that a wire was hot, and, being dared by one of his companions to touch it, got on a board, took it in his hands, and was killed. A judgment for the plaintiff was sustained. To same effect, see Macon v. Paducah Street Railway Co., 110 Ky. 680, 23 Ky. Law Rep. 46, 62 S. W. 496; Lexington Railroad Co. v. Fain’s Adm’r, 71 S. W. 628, 24 Ky. Law Rep. 1443; Thomas v. City of Somerset, 97 S. W. 420, 7 L. R. A. (N. S.) 963, 30 Ky. Law Rep. 131; Maysville Gas Co. v. Thomas’ Adm’r, 21 Ky. Law Rep. 1690; Id., 75 S. AY. 1129, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 403. But in all of these cases the wire was in the street. Here the wire was 18 feet above the street. It could only be reached by a person climbing the electric light pole or walking up the guy wire of the telephone company. In all the cases where a liability has been imposed for what is known as an attractive nuisance to children, the nuisance has been placed within their reach. AYe know of no case where this has been applied to things put 18 feet above the ground, which may only be reached by climbing a pole or walking up a wire. Such structures are not an invitation to children to use them. A child may climb a dead tree, and thus get hurt; but the owner of the free cannot be said to maintain an attractive nuisance, because he keeps a rotten tree on his land. To climb this pole *400or walk this wire was as difficult as to climb a tree, and no reason would exist for holding one an attractive nuisance more than the other, for, if the limbs of the tree were brittle or rotten, there would be great danger in climbing out on them. In Simonton v. Citizens’ Electric Light Co., 28 Tex. Civ. App. 374, 67 S. W. 530, the defendant had placed spikes in its poles for the use of its men in ascending and descending them. Children in the neighborhood got to using the pole in the same way. One of them went up on the pole and lost his balance and fell to the ground. It was held that the company was not liable. The spikes on the side of the pole would offer a much greater inducement to a child to climb the pole than the guy wire offered . in the case before us. In Johnson v. Paducah Laundry Co., 122 Ky. 369, 92 S. W. 330, 5 L. R. A. (N. S.) 733, 29 Ky. L., R. 59, the defendant had upon its open lot an open vat of hot water. The plaintiff, walking upon the lot in the night for a purpose of his own and without right, fell into' the vat of hot water and was burned. It was held that he could not recover. In Schauf’s Adm’r v. City of Paducah, 106 K. 228, 20 Ky. Law Rep. 1796, 50 S. W. 42, 90 Am. St. Rep. 220, a little boy wading out into an open pond on the property of the city to catch a bird got over his depth and was drowned. It was held that there could be no recovery. Other authorities are collected in these opinions. The tendency of the more recent cases is to restrict, rather than enlarge, the application of the principle laid down in what are called the Turntable Cases, and to hold that the defendant is not liable unless he knows, or ought in the exercise of ordinary care to know, that his structure is alluring to children and endangers them. See note to Barnes v. Shreveport R. R. Co., 49 Am. *401St. Rep. 416-426. In Harris v. Cowles, 38 Wash. 331, 80 Pac. 537, 107 Am. St. Rep. 847, a child was injured by a revolving door at the entrance to a'building; the door being similar to those in common use in winter to keep out the cold. It was held that the trespasser, though a child of tender years, could not recover, on the ground that to extend the rule would be to impose a burden upon the property owners that would be unreasonable. The same principle was applied in Fitzmaurice v. Connecticut R. R. Co., 78 Conn. 406, 62 Atl. 620, 112 Am. St. Rep. 159, where a child was burned at a pile of hot ashes left upon the defendant’s premises, and in Foster-Herbert v. Cut Stone Co., 115 Tenn. 688, 91 S. W. 199, 4 L. R. A. (N. S.) 804, 112 Am. St. Rep. 881, where a child climbed into a low wagon and was there hurt.

As long as electric light wires are not put under ground, they must be put upon poles, and, where they are placed above the street as high as 18 feet, the company should not be required to anticipate that children will climb up to the wires and get hurt. Guy wires are necessary on high poles at street corners where the line turns. A guy wire placed on a high pole to keep it in place, or some such contrivance, cannot well be dispensed with. Such a wire is not a dangerous instrumentality, attractive or alluring to children within the meaning of the Turntable Cases. The little boy was a trespasser upon the defendant’s wire, and, being a trespasser, he cannot complain that the premises were unsafe. Children, no less than adults, when they trespass upon the property of another, take the risk unless the circumstances bring the case within the principle of what is known as the Turntable Cases, where a dangerous instrumentality is maintained, with the knowledge, actual or con*402structive, that it is alluring to children and endangers them. A wire 18 feet above the ground, which can only be reached as this wire was, cannot be said to fall within the exception to the general rule.

Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.