56 Ga. App. 483 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1937
Exception is taken to a judgment sustaining a general demurrer to this action for damages by Fay Brim against Healey Beal Estate and Improvement Company. In the petition it is alleged that the defendant owns and maintains the William-Oliver Building as an office building; that on or about June 18, 1936, the plaintiff was employed in the office of the Southern Finance and Securities Company, a tenant of the defendant, occupying offices on the tenth floor of said building; that the defendant, in constructing and maintaining said building, placed and maintained a metal strip on the floor of the offices occupied by the plaintiff’s employer, which strip was at the base of the doorway at the entrance from the hall into the offices where she worked; that said strip was placed entirely across said doorway; that it was approximately three feet long and two and a half inches wide, and had a height of an inch above the level of the floor, one fourth of said height being a square edge thereto, and then beveled, and said strip was not set in the floor deep enough to prevent its having a square perpendicular edge above the surface of the floor of one fourth of an inch; that the beveled part of said metal strip is very smooth, bright, and shiny, and as placed and maintained in said doorway is very deceptive in appearance and presents an optical illusion, and has the appearance, when not very closely examined, to begin at the floor; that said metal strip as placed and maintained does not appear to the casual observer to have a perpendicular or square edge at the floor, and said beveled part has the appearance of beginning at the floor level, but a minute examination of it will disclose that it has a square edge at the floor level that rises absolutely perpendicular from the floor level to a height of one fourth of an inch,'and then the bevel begins; that it is usual, customary, and safe to place such strips so that the beveled part will begin at the floor level, in order that when one is walking over it, the beveled part will permit the foot to glide over it without tripping; that at the time the plaintiff was injured she was entering said offices from the hall of said building; that while walking into said offices her shoe struck said metal strip,
Does the petition set out a cause of action? We are of the opinion that it does not, for the reason that when properly construed it shows that the plaintiff, by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence, could have avoided the consequences to herself of the defendant’s alleged negligence. Code, § 105-603. The petition discloses that the plaintiff was an employee of a tenant of the defendant. It is not alleged for what period of time she had been employed at the date of her alleged injury, nor is it alleged how long her employer had been a tenant of the defendant; but it is to be assumed (construing the petition most strongly against her) that both the employment and tenancy had existed for sometime, at least for such a period of time as to permit her, as an ordinary prudent and intelligent person, to thoroughly acquaint herself with the actual visible physical surroundings of her employment. It is alleged that the defendant, in constructing and maintaining the building, had placed in the doorway which served as the entrance from the hall of said building to the offices in which the plaintiff worked, as a threshold, a strip of metal; and that while it is customary to bevel off such a strip to the floor, in order that when one is walking over it the beveled part will permit the foot to .glide over it without tripping, the defendant in this instance did not do so, but that said strip “was not set in the floor deep enough to prevent its having a square perpendicular .edge
Judgment■ affirmed.