117 Ga. 191 | Ga. | 1903
The petition filed by the plaintiff in the court below makes substantially the following case. The plaintiff was engaged in the printing and publishing business in the City of Atlanta, maintaining a large establishment in which many workmen were employed. In the operation of his machinery and the lighting of his place of business he was dependent upon electric power supplied by the Georgia Electric Light Company, a corporation, and this power was conveyed by means of wires contained in conduits which were laid under the ground. On a named day the defendants were engaged in constructing a building which was to be located on the same street as that on which the plaintiff’s place of business was situated, and, as incident to the work- of construction, were excavating the lot of the defendant English, on which the building was to be constructed, for thepurposeof enclosing a basement. In doing this they also excavated the earth under the sidewalk adjoining the lot. This was done without authority of law and in violation of an ordinance of the City of Atlanta. By the negligence of the employees of the defendants, a wall of earth was allowed to fall in on the conduits containing the electric wires over which power was conveyed to the plaintiff’s plant; the wires were broken, and for several hours he was without the means of conducting his business; by reason of which fact he suffered damage set out in the petition. By amendments it was alleged that the plaintiff had a right to demand of the Georgia Electric Light Company the electric power which it had been furnishing him; that but for the tort complained of, that company would have furnished him with power and he would not have been damaged as set out; that the conduits of the electric light company were placed in the street by authority of the City of Atlanta and in the exercise of the right of eminent domain in the company; that the plaintiff was under a contract with the Georgia Electric Light Company, by virtue of which that company furnished him with electric power' and under the terms of which he could not recover from it for damage occasioned by an accidental interruption of the current- such as this was; that at the time of the commission of the tort complained of, there was no other company or person in Atlanta offer
In the brief of counsel for the defendants in error considerable ■stress is laid upon the argument that the plaintiff can notj recover, because the negligence of the defendants (conceding that they were negligent as alleged in the petition) was not the proximate cause of the injury done to the plaintiff. In view of the decision of this ■court in the case of Southern Ry. Co. v. Webb, 116 Ga. 157, we ■are not prepared to say that the failure of the power in the plaintiff’s place of business was not such a result as was reasonably to be anticipated from the alleged tort of the defendants in so excavating the lot on which they were at work that the conduits containing the electric wires were broken and the current interrupted.
There is another view presented by counsel for defendants in ■error, which, if correct, settles beyond doubt that the court below was right in sustaining th e general demurrer to the petition. It will be borne in mind that this is not an action for an injury to the person or property of the plaintiff. It is not claimed that the defendants have violated any contractual duty owed to the plaintiff. Their •duty to the public in performing the work in which they were engaged was to do it in such a manner as not to negligently injure the person or property of any one. According to this petition, the •damage done by them was to the property of the Georgia Electric Light Company, which was under contract to furnish to the plaintiff electric power, and the resulting damage done to theJBfcintiff was that it was rendered impossible for that compa^f to ■comply with its contract. If the plaintiff can recover of these defendants upon this cause of action, then a customer of his, who was injured by the delay occasioned by the stopping of his work, could also recover from them; and one who had been damaged through his delay could in turn hold them liable; and -so on without limit to the number of persons who might' recover on account of the injury done to the property of the company owning the
A case in point which well illustrates the principle governing the one now under consideration is that of Dale v. Grant, 34 N. J. L. 142, where it was held that “ a party who, by contract, is entitled to all the articles to be manufactured by unincorporated company — he, such party, furnishing the raw materials — can not maintain an action against a wrong-doer, who, by a trespass, stops the machinery of such company, so that it is prevented from furnishing, under said contract, manufactured goods to as great an extent as it otherwise would have done.” In the opinion (p. 149) the court says: “ The law does not attempt to give full reparation to all parties injured by a wrong committed. If this were so, all parties holding contracts, if such exist, under the plaintiffs who may have been injuriously affected by the conduct of the defendants, would be entitled to a suit. It is only the proximate injury that the law endeavors to compensate; the more remote comes under the head of damnum absque injuriaSo, also, in Connecticut Ins. Co. v. New York R. Co., 25 Conn. 265, it is held that where one person has contract relations with another, an injury to the latter which affects disastrously those relations, does not constitute a legal injury to the former. From the opinion delivered by Storrs, J., we quote the following very pertinent remarks: “ Such are the complications of human affairs, so endless and far-reaching the mutual promises of man to man, in business and in matters of money and