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Davenport v. Electric Co.

Adding, "I was on the opposite side of the street delivering mail going west and probably got diagonally across to where this electric light was when I heard a holler and a shout and saw the boy fall down and a lady ran out of the real estate office and a man out of the drugstore. . . . The boy fell on the dirty sidewalk just about where the wire was hanging. The wire hung over the sidewalk about a foot, I should judge, from the curb."

Other witnesses for plaintiff testified that the injury happened as stated above; that the night before it stormed and rained but cleared about five o'clock a. m. One witness stated he saw this wire emit sparks at two a. m., and that the accident happened about seven-thirty or eight; that the wire causing the injury was an insulated one, such as is used to carry electric currents; and that defendant furnished electricity in that part of the city.

The evidence of the defendant is not material to the scope of review arising on the questions presented on this appeal. Plaintiff had judgment for $9000, from which defendant duly perfected its appeal.

OPINION.

I. It is insisted for defendant that the refusal of the court to cause a voir dire examination of the plaintiff upon the request of defendant, made after plaintiff had been sworn as a witness and had proceeded to testify until he stated in answer to a question that he did not remember his birthday, was reversible error.

This point is untenable, unless it can be shown that the trial court abused its discretion or misconceived the law in this matter. [2 Rice on Evidence, n. 289 et seq.; State v. Scanlan, 58 Mo. 1. c. 205; State v. Jefferson, 77 Mo. 1. c. 138; State v. Doyle, 107 Mo. 1. c. 42; State v. Nelson, 132 Mo. 184; State v. Brown, 209 Mo. 1. c. 419; State v. Jeffries, 210 Mo. 326.]

Davenport v. Electric Co.

The statute in disqualifying certain persons to testify, among others, specifies, "a child under ten years of age, who appears incapable of receiving just impressions of the facts respecting which they are examined, or of relating them truly." [R. S. 1909, sec. 6362.] This statute has been applied in the foregoing citations, where it has been uniformly ruled that children ranging from five to nine years may be admitted as witnesses if it appears upon their preliminary examinations that they have sufficient intelligence to understand the questions put to them and are not otherwise incompetent. In all of those cases the examination of the witness either by the court's initiative or upon the request of the adverse party, was had before the witness was sworn and admitted to testify. This is the correct practice, for the object of such an inquiry is to determine the personal competency of a person proposed as a witness; hence, the demand therefor should be made before the witness has been sworn or admitted to testify.

In the case at bar no objection was made when the plaintiff was sworn as a witness, nor to the giving of his testimony until he had been recalled after the temporary interrogation of his father showed the date of his birth. The witness had stated that he was ten years old and had been injured three years before, when he was seven years old, before any objection to his further testimony was made by defendant. The request then made was not that the witness should be examined as to his statutory disqualification (incapacity to understand the questions or to answer them truly) but as to his comprehension of the obligations of an oath. If the latter disqualification existed, then the witness was incompetent under the common law regardless of his age. Nothing had transpired up to the time this request was made which tended even by inference to show that the witness on the stand had no knowledge

Davenport v. Electric Co.

of the obligations of an oath or was deficient in moral training. Hence there was no excuse for this untimely request, made by defendant. The record shows that the trial judge distinctly stated that he simply denied the right to go into the inquiry at that time, but would not prohibit questions by the defendant afterwards. The witness was afterwards fully cross-examined, but no questions were put as to his knowledge of the nature and obligations of an oath or tending to elicit any answers on that point. We have set out much of the testimony of this witness while being cross-examined by the defendant, and it is only fair to say that it leaves the impression of an ingenuous and graphic narration of facts and affords no intimation that the witness, then between ten and eleven years of age, was insensible to the sanctions of an oath or deficient in the measure of intelligence common to boys of that age. We rule the point under review against defendant.

II. Defendant insists that the peremptory instruction to find in its favor should have been given at the close of plaintiff's case. In support of this view, it is argued by defendant that there was no evidence that the wire causing plaintiff's injury belonged to the King Electric Company, but this contention overlooks the reasonable inferences which the jury were at liberty to draw from the statements of the witnesses, showing that this part of the city was supplied with electricity by defendant; that it was engaged at the spot where plaintiff was injured in changing poles; that it had been at work there on the evening before, and that its men and representatives removed the very wire which caused plaintiff's hurt. If any real doubt existed on that subject, the disproof of ownership was peculiarly within the power of the defendant. No attempt whatever was made to show that it did not

Davenport v. Electric Co.

own these insulated wires or was not engaged in lighting this territory. Slight circumstances are sufficient to establish a fact where the defendant is peculiarly possessed with power to disprove it and fails to adduce such evidence. We think there was ample evidence in the record in this case to warrant the inference that defendant owned the wire causing the injury.

III. Defendant next insists that there was no credible evidence tending to prove its negligent maintenance of the wire causing the injury, and that for this reason its demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained.

Mrs. Richter's testimony shows that the wire was broken and suspended over the street for the space of five hours before the injury to plaintiff, as she saw it, as early as two o'clock in the morning, dropping sparks of fire; that the rain had ceased at five o'clock; that she thought the end of the hanging wire was about eighteen inches above the ground. Defendant insists that this testimony is incredible, because it says the wire in question carried a current of about two thousand volts, and that according to the known laws of electricity, this voltage was insufficient to transmit the current from the end of the wire through an air space of eighteen inches to the ground. Defendant asks the court to affirm this law as of its judicial knowledge.

If this theory of the defendant could be scientifically established as one of the laws of electricity, and therefore proper to be declared as within the judicial knowledge of the court, still there is no reason why that should be done in the present case, for its application at all would depend upon two questions of fact. First, the exact voltage of the electrical current carried by the wire; and, second, the distance of the end of the wire above the soil. There was no testimony

Davenport v. Electric Co.

on either of these subjects which the jury were bound to believe to be true. They might have disbelieved the evidence relating to the amount of the electrical current, and they might have disbelieved the testimony touching the distance between the end of the wire and the ground. On the other hand, the jury had the right to believe the evidence of Mrs. Richter, that electrical sparks were being emitted by this wire at two o'clock in the morning, and to find from that fact that the end of the wire was close enough to the earth to permit of this sparking in accordance with the laws of electricity. As the credibility of this witness's testimony was a matter for the jury to determine, and as the record shows there was ground upon which it could be believed without contravening the electrical principle assumed by defendant, we cannot hold that there was no basis for the finding in this case that the dangerous condition of the wire had existed for a sufficient length of time to charge defendant with its negligent maintenance. We, therefore, rule that the trial court did not err in refusing to take the case from the jury on the theory that the testimony of Mrs. Richter was incredible.

There was ample proof in the record for the finding by the jury that the defendant owned the electrical wires causing plaintiff's injury, and that he met with the mishap where he had a right to be and without fault on his part. The law on this subject has been announced after the most careful consideration in a number of recent decisions, to the effect that it is the duty of the owner of that dangerous agency to exercise the highest degree of care in maintaining electrically charged wires. The general use of these appliances on the streets and highways which the public are compelled to use at all times, makes it the duty of the owner to exercise a degree of care commensurate with the proper protection of the public. [Geismann

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