Apparently on November 8, 1975, appellant entered into a contract to purchase a house belonging to Mr. Frank Bahin, who is not a party to this appeal. Bahin secured the services of appellee to conduct a termite inspection of the premises as a prerequisite to closing the sale. Pursuant to its contract appellee made two written representations to Bahin. The first was undated and contained the following: “In accordance with your request, we have made a thorough inspection of the property at the above address. At the time of our inspection, there was no visible evidence of Subterranean Termite activity or any other wood destroying organisms. This letter represents a one year guarantee from the date above.” The second letter to Bahin from appellee was dated December 22, 1975 and contained the following: “Based on careful visual inspection [of] accessible areas and on sounding of accessible structural members, there is no evidence of termite or other wood destroying insect *302 infestation in the subject property, and if such infestation previously existed, it has also been corrected.” Bahin furnished appellant copies of the letters from appellee when the sale of the house was closed on December 23, 1975.
Some months later problems developed underneath the house and were discovered by appellant at that time. Appellant instituted the instant tort action against appellee, alleging that appellee’s negligence in inspecting the house “was the sole and proximate cause of the damages [appellant] suffered to his home and property . . .” Appellee subsequently moved for summary judgment and supported the motion with the affidavit of its president. In that affidavit appellee’s president stated “[t]hat [appellee] did contract with Frank Bahin to check a residential dwelling located on Grove Street in Barnesville, Georgia; that a contractual arrangement between [appellee] and Frank Bahin was solely to examine said structure to determine if there were any wood destroying organisms present on or in said structure, and if none were found to warrant for a period of one year that the property would be free from wood destroying organisms.” In opposition to the motion, appellant filed the affidavit of the County Sanitarian who swore that he had made a visual inspection of the premises in May of 1976 and had “found that the entire area which comprised the crawl space under said residence ... was filled with raw sewage and the wood floor [of the] residence and floor under-layment was covered with mold and fungus which had built up over a period of time exceeding 6 months prior to the date of my inspection of said dwelling.”
The basis for appellee’s motion for summary judgment was that it had contracted to inspect for termites and wood destroying organisms but the evidence demonstrated that the damage to appellant’s house was the proximate result of a broken sewer line, not wood destroying organisms, and that this was not within the scope of its inspection and warranty. See
Wilcher v. Orkin Exterminating Co.,
1. “[I]f the tort results from the violation of a duty, itself the consequence of a contract, the right of action is confined to the parties and privies to that contract, except in cases where the party would
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have a right of action for the injury done independently of the contract...” Code Ann. § 105-106 (a). Appellee’s duty to inspect the premises for wood destroying organism infestation in the instant case arose initially out of contract with Bahin. “[T]hus, privity would be required unless [appellant] comes within the last stated exception, i.e., those cases where the party would have had a right of action independent of the contract.”
Beam v. Omark Industries,
It is clear that, at the time the property was alleged to have been negligently inspected, appellant was neither a party to appellee’s contract with Bahin nor the owner of the property. “An action for a tort shall, in general, be brought in the name of the person whose legal right has been affected, and who was legally interested in the property at the time the injury thereto was committed, and against the party committing the injury . . .” Code Ann. § 3-109. The mere delivery by Bahin to appellant of appellee’s written representations to Bahin concerning the premises is not sufficient to make appellant a “privy” by assignment to Bahin’s rights against appellee under the contract so as to entitle appellant to recover in tort for the negligent performance of the contract. See generally
Sorrento Italian Restaurant v. Franco,
2. Because the judgment of the trial court must be reversed for the reasons stated in Division 1 of this opinion, it is unnecessary for us to consider appellant’s remaining enumeration of error which challenges the trial court’s consideration of an affidavit filed on behalf of appellee.
Judgment reversed.
