91 Ga. App. 20 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1954
1. Code § 105-101 provides as follows: “A tort is the unlawful violation of a private legal right, other than a mere breach of contract, express or implied; or, it may be the violation of a public duty, by reason of which some special damage accrues to the individual.” Code § 105-103 provides: “When the law requires one to do an act for the benefit of another, or to forbear the doing of that which may injure another, though no action be given in express terms, upon the accrual of damage the injured party may recover.” Code § 105-106 provides: “No privity is necessary to support'an action for a tort; but if 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 have had a right of action for the injury done, independently of the contract.”
The allegations of the original petition, when measured by the provisions of- the principles of law as announced in the above Code sections, set out a plaintiff and a defendant and a.specific cause of complaint sufficiently to be amendable. If the petition
It is contended by counsel for the defendant that Evans v. Scott & Co. and Anderson v. Scott & Co., 43 Ga. App. 332 (158 S. E. 584), control the instant case, in that the court held in those companion cases that no cause of action was set forth in the petition. Those cases are not authority and do not control the instant case. No amendment was filed in those cases, but an amendment was filed in the instant case. In those cases the court did not hold that the plaintiff could not have corrected the cause of action by amendment, if they had chosen to do so. In the instant case, an amendment was offered, which showed “substantially the same wrong in respect to the same transaction. If there is substantial identity of wrong, there is substantial identity of causes of action.”
Judgment reversed.