Richard W. Barry, Jr. (the plaintiff father) and Helen Katherine Barry, a minor (the plaintiff daughter) brought an action for damages against Terry Wayne Cantrell and Katherine T. Cantrell in the DeKalb Superior Court. The complaint alleged that a hammock was located within the backyard of the residence of the defendants which hammock was anchored on оne end to a live tree and on the other end to a dead tree about eight to ten feet tall; that the dead tree had been dead for a long time which was well known to the defendants but was not known or disclosed to the plaintiffs; that it was the custom of the defendants to allow their invited guests including children to sit, swing or lie down on the hammock; that the defendants knew or should have known that the hammock, anchored to a dead tree, was extremely dangerous, a hidden peril and a man trap for anyone who might sit on the hammоck, but neither of the defendants imparted any information or warning about it to the plaintiff daughter.
The complaint further alleged that the plaintiff daughter was invited to the residence of the defendants to attend a birthday party for their daughter; that while in attendance at the party the plaintiff daughter was sitting with three or four of her friends on the hammock when the dead tree to which the hammock was anchored broke at its base causing the tree to fall on the plaintiff daughter, injuring her; that the defendants owed the plaintiff daughter, a minor, 11 years old, who was an invitée on the defendants’ property at the time of her injury, a duty to refrain from wilfully and recklessly exposing her to a hidden peril and to exercisе ordinary care to avoid injury to her while she was a guest and invitee on the premises of the defendants; that the defendants owed the plaintiff daughter the duty to supervise her and protect her from injury by reason of the hidden peril because of her youth and due to the circumstances of being one of the invited *440 guests to their daughter’s birthday party.
In the complaint it was alleged that the hammock attached to the dead tree constituted a hidden peril in the nature of a man trap which attracted the children who were attending the birthday party to it and created a duty on the defendants that they exercise ordinary care to prevent injury to any of the children and that, by the defendant’s failure to carry out this duty, the plаintiff daughter was injured severely and permanently.
The defendants in their answer denied the material allegations of the complaint. After discovery by both sides, the defendants movеd for summary judgent. After a hearing, the trial judge granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment based on the following grounds: 1) that the plaintiff daughter was a licensee at the time of the incidеnt complained of; 2) that the defendants were liable only for wilful and wanton injury; 3) that the defendants had no knowledge that the tree stump would fall. From the adverse judgment the plaintiffs аppeal. Held:
1. As the defendants contend, Georgia has adopted the rule that a social guest is not an invitee but is a licensee.
See Laurens v. Rush,
In
Patterson v. Thomas,
Here, the burden was on the defendants in their motion for summary judgment to affirmatively negative the claim of the plaintiffs and show they are not entitled to recovеr under any theory of the case and to accomplish this by evidence which demands a finding to that effect.
First of Ga. Ins. Co. v. Josey,
The defendants testifiеd expressly that they did not know the tree was defective until after it fell. The plaintiff *442 daughter testified that she did not notice anything about the tree and the plaintiff father testified that frоm a great distance the bark looked normal. The tree had been topped before the defendants acquired their residence and they had lived there apрroximately one year and a half at the time the tree fell.
While on the trial of this case with the same proof offered as that presented on motion for summary judgment а directed verdict might have been proper, this does not mean that the grant of summary judgment was authorized. The defendants did not conclusively establish that they had no reason tо know that the tree was defective and no basis for inspecting it after a year and a half. This is a case in which the jury should determine whether the defendants should have known of thе dangerous condition of the tree.
2. The complaint alleged the defendants owed the plaintiff daughter "the duty to supervise her and protect her from injury by reason of hiddеn perils because of her youth.” In response to the interrogatories of the defendants with regard to acts or omissions that caused or contributed to the injuries of the plaintiff daughter the plaintiffs answered: "Defendants were negligent in that they failed to properly supervise the children in attendance at the said birthday party to prevent аn injury such as the injury to Helen Katherine Barry.” On deposition the plaintiff father was asked: "Do you know of any other act of negligence which you contend the Cantrells are guilty оf other than the fact that they had this hammock anchored on one end to a dead tree or tree trunk?” He answered: "It is also our understanding that there was no parentаl supervision during the time that some fifteen to eighteen girls were at this swimming party.
"It seems that Mrs. Cantrell was out elsewhere, and Mr. Cantrell was in the house either in the workshop or watching а ball game, and there is all of these invited guests my daughter’s age, one or two years younger and one or two years older, in a large swimming pool with no adult supervision and allowed to play.
"Needless to say, had there been adult supervision, I don’t think there would have been five children allowed to *443 swing on this hammock.”
The defendant contends that this issue was not argued before the trial court and hence could not be considered by this court, citing
Ivey Const. Co. v. Transamerica Ins. Co.,
Judgment reversed.
