39 Ga. App. 422 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1929
Lyle C. Davis brought his action for damages against Starrett Brothers Incorporated, alleging that while working in an elevator shaft on the first floor of a certain building in Atlanta as the employee of the Tyler Company, a carpenter who was in the employ of Starrett Brothers Incorporated and was working in the shaft five floors above him negligently dropped a hammer down the shaft and it fell upon him .and seriously injured him. The defendant was alleged to be negligent because it did not place something underneath its carpenters to prevent anything from falling down the shaft and injuring him, and for various other reasons which need not be stated here. After the plaintiff had rested his case and the defendant had submitted a part of its evidence, the defendant offered to amend its answer by pleading that the plaintiff was barred by reason of the fact he was working under the workmen’s compensation act, and was, under an agreement with the Tyler Company and a named insurance carrier, which had been approved by the industrial commission, receiving $15 a week for the injuries alleged in the petition. The plaintiff objected to the allowance of the amendment, moved to strike it, and demurred to it.'- The said objection, motion to strike, and demurrer were all overruled, and the plaintiff excepted pendente lite. The court then directed a verdict for the defendant, and a verdict was rendered accordingly. The plaintiff’s motion for a new trial as amended was overruled, and he excepted.
The motion for a new trial contains several special grounds which disclose no reversible error and warrant no special consideration. The remainder of the special grounds are governed by the
The salient features of the latter contract appear from the following: Starrett Brothers Incorporated is designated “Builder,” and the Tyler Company “subcontractor.” The contract provides: 1st. That “to the satisfaction of the Builder and the Architect,” the Subcontractor shall provide all materials and perform all work
We are aware that the jury might have concluded from some of the testimony that Starrett Brothers Incorporated did not attempt to exercise authority over the work being done by the Tyler Company. This, however, is not decisive of the issue. The question is whether or not the builder retained the right to direct and control the work. Under the contract the builder could detail the manner in which the work was to be done by furnishing additional plans and specifications. It could increase the work or reduce it. It could, in certain instances, have the work stopped and recommenced at its pleasure. It could determine that there were not enough
Judgment affirmed.