This сase comes to this court on certiorari to the Court of Appeals, that court having held in
City of Summerville
v.
Aldred,
100
Ga. App.
66 (
“Claim for damages. In pursuance of the provisions of Section 69-303 of the Code of Georgia concerning the liability of a municipality for injuries resulting from defects in streets. Mayor and Council, City of Summerville, Summerville, Georgia. 'Gentlemen: You are hereby notified that on November 26, 1956, at approximately 8 p.m., Mrs. W. F. Aldred and Miss Mable Aldred suffered severe injuries while riding in a car driven by Mrs. J. B. Woodard, in the City of Summerville, Georgia. The car being driven in a westerly direction over and along First Street, the vehicle being driven over a manhole located in approximately the middle of the strеet at the intersection of Union and First Street. Your petitioners, Mrs. W. F. Aldred and Miss Mable Aldred, make claim and demand upon the City of Summerville, in the sum of $50,000 and $25,-000 respectively, for damages sustainеd while passengers in Mrs. J. B. Woodard’s car. Mrs. W. F. Aldred suffered a severe ankle injury, which is permanent in nature, and other injuries which will be more fully described in a report available from Dr. Goodwin, Summerville, Georgia. Miss Mable Aldred suffered injuries to her face and head, which are permanent in nature, and will be more fully described by Dr. Goodwin. I am sure the Mayor and Council are familiar with the facts and circumstances surrounding this case; consequently, I will not try to go into further detail. Such demand and claim for damages is made in pursuance of provisions of Section 69-303 of thе Code of the State of Georgia.
“Mrs. W. F. Aldred
Miss Mable Aldred
By: James A. Aldred
Plaintiffs’ Attorney.’ ”
Held:
While Code (Ann.) § 69-308 was originally codified from the act of 1899 (Ga. L. 1899, p. 74), this act has been twice amended, but the provisions that no person having a claim for money damages against any municipal corporation on account of injuries to person or property shall bring any suit without first presenting in writing such claim to the governing authоrity of said municipality for adjustment, “stating the time, place, and *653 extent of such injury, as nearly as practicable, and the negligence which caused the same, and no such suit shall be еntertained by the courts against such municipality until the cause of action therein shall have been first presented to said governing authority, for adjustment,” were in the original act and still rеmain in the Code (Ann.) section.
In 1903 this court was called on to construe the above-quoted provisions of this act, and in
Langley
v.
City Council of Augusta,
118
Ga.
590, 600 (
In
Kennedy
v.
Mayor &c. of Savannah,
8
Ga. App.
98 (1, 2) (
In
City of Atlanta
v.
Hawkins,
45
Ga. App.
847, 850 (
In
Olmstead
v.
Mayor
&c.
of Savannah,
57
Ga. App.
815 (
In the case now under consideration Judge Carlisle, speaking for the Court of Appeals, did not overrule, attempt to distinguish,
*655
or cite either one of the four decisions referred to above, but simply stated: “while there may be some conflict in the authorities as to whether it is necessary that the written notice advise the municipality as to the specific act or acts of negligence on the part of the municipality relied upon as the basis for the recovery sought (compare
Harrison Co.
v.
City of Atlanta,
26
Ga. App.
727,
The notice in the instant case advises the city that “ a manhole located in approximately the middle of the street at the intersection of Union аnd First Street,”' was the cause of the injury. In the Kennedy case, supra, the notice informed the city: “He was injured . . . by a fall from the steps leading from the Strand to Factors Walk, opposite Heсker-Jones Jewell Milling Company place, 220-222 Bay Street, West. He fell because of the defective steps.” In City of Atlanta v. Hawkins, supra, the notice stated that the plaintiff “was injured on May 14, 1931, by stepping on a lid of a water-meter on the east side of North Boulevard just a few feet north of Greenwood Avenue, and that this lid was defective and gave way, causing her injuries.” In the Olmstead case, supra, the notice stated that, “while walking east on St. Julian Street, between Price and Houston Streets, she stepped on a brick in the sidewalk which turned and threw her to the sidewalk.” It will be nоted that none of these notices specifically set out “the negligence which caused” the injury, yet the Court of Appeals, in three of these cases, over twenty years аgo, has said that these notices were sufficient.
Accordingly, we hold that the Court of Appeals erred in deciding in this case that the written notice given to the municipality was not a sufficient compliance with the requirements of the statute (Code, Ann., § 69-308), because, that ruling is in conflict with the decision of this court in
Langley
v.
City Council of Augusta,
118
Ga.
590 (
Judgment reversed.
