1 Ga. App. 489 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
The sole assignment of error in this case is upon the sustaining of a general demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition. The material' allegations of the petition are substantially as follows: The plaintiff was employed by the defendant company, a corporation engaged in the manufacture of iron goods and operating in connection therewith an iron foundry and a furnace for the purpose of melting pig iron and reducing it to a liquid state. A part of the plaintiff’s work was to open and close the out-hole of the cupola of a blast furnace; and on the day of the injury, while he was trying to close said hole, the defendant company’s foreman, to whose orders petitioner was subject and under whose directions he was then working, suddenly, negligent^, and without warning to him, turned on the blast in the furnace, driving air with particles of melted iron through the hole, and one of these heated particles of the iron struck him in the eye, destroying the sight thereof. The extent of the injury and damage done the plaintiff is set out at length;- his freedom from fault is alleged, and the charge is made that the “injuries so received were caused entirely by the negligence of said J. S. Schofield’s Sons Company, its agents, and employees, as aforesaid.”
1. It will be seen that the liability of the defendant turns upon the question as to whether or not the foreman who negligently turned on the blast was or was not a fellow-servant of the plaintiff within the purview of the rule stated in the Civil Code, §2610, which provides that, “except in- case of railroad companies, the master is not liable to one servant for injuries arising from the negligence or misconduct of other servants about the same business.”
Counsel for plaintiff in error, apprehending that the Moore case, supra, which was decided subsequently to the hearing of this case in the court below, might control the case against him in this court, suggested in his argument that he might be able to perfect his petition by an amendment, so that it would set out a cause of action under the rule in that case, and requested that in the event of an affirmance of the judgment he should be granted leave to amend.