39 S.E.2d 429 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1946
1. When a corporation, engaged in the retail mercantile business, impliedly extends an invitation to the public to trade in its store, it is required to exercise the same degree of diligence to protect its customers from the tortious misconduct of its employees as an individual must exercise to protect an invitee from the misconduct of such individual's agents and employees acting about their master's business and within the scope of their employment, though such misconduct of the corporation's agents and employees may involve elements of slander.
(a) Accordingly, in an action against a corporation for damages caused by false accusations of the defendant retail store's cashier and manager, that the plaintiff, who was a customer in said store, had obtained a box of dried milk for which she refused to pay, thus intimating that the plaintiff was a cheat, swindler, and thief, the allegations of the petition are sufficient, as against the demurrers of the defendant, to set out a cause of action against the defendant corporation.
2. The cases cited and relied on by the plaintiff in error do not, under the facts of this case, authorize or require a different ruling from the one herein above made.
The defendant demurred generally to the petition on the ground that it did not set out a cause of action and specially to three paragraphs *266 of the petition which alleged in substance (a) that it was the duty of the defendant to protect its customers from tortious misconduct of its employees acting about the business of the corporation and within the scope of their employment; and (b) that the plaintiff was an invitee and customer in the store of the defendant and had the legal right owed her by the defendant to be protected from any tortious misconduct on the part of the defendant corporation from its agents and employees acting within the scope of their duties and about the business of the defendant; and (c) that the abusive treatment accorded plaintiff by the cashier and manager constituted tortious misconduct on the part of the defendant from its agents and employees acting within the scope of their duties and about the business of the defendant corporation, upon the grounds that said allegations were mere conclusions of law.
The court overruled the demurrers, and the defendant excepted.
1. This case is almost identical with and is controlled by SouthernGrocery Stores v. Keys,
2. The cases cited and relied on by the plaintiff in error do not, under the facts of this case, authorize or require a different ruling from the one hereinabove made.
Judgment affirmed. Felton and Parker, JJ., concur.