Plaintiffs deceased son was an employee of the Columbus Water Works when he was electrocuted when a crane operated by employees of a subcontractor came in contact with high-tension lines. Suit was originally filed against the subcontrator and his employee and defendant Floyd, a fellow-employee of plaintiffs son, was subsequently made a party. Defendant Floyd’s answer denied negligence and alleged the affirmative defenses of estoppel, accord and satisfaction, payment, release, and waiver, and in the alternative contributory or comparative negligence, assumption of the risk, and last clear chance. The defenses were predicated on the theory that the Workmen’s Compensation Act of Georgia did not include a fellow-employee within its definition of a third-party tortfeasor to a common law action and that an award under the Act by the common employer, the City of Columbus, Georgia, precluded recovery. Plaintiff moved to strike certain paragraphs of the answer relating to Workmen’s Compensation. An order granting the motion and expunging references to the Act was entered August 28,1973. Certificate of immediate review was granted August 30, 1973, and defendant Floyd’s notice of appeal was made the same day. Held:
1. Appellant’s enumerations of error 1 through 8 are controlled by the resolution of the question of whether an employee, after having collected Workmen’s Compensation benefits from the employer, can proceed against a fellow employee in a common law tort action against the offending employee as an individual. We answer that question in the affirmative.
The Workmen’s Compensation Act bestows benefits akin to those under an insurance policy. Being of that
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nature, its receipt by an injured employee affords no ground upon which a third person who negligently inflicted the injury should escape liability, either wholly or in part.
Hotel Equipment Co. v. Liddell,
Ga. L. 1972, pp. 929,930 (Code Ann. § 114-103), which relates to the rights and remedies granted to an employee and which is under attack in the instant case, was not intended to, nor does it extinguish an employee’s action against "any third-party tortfeasor.” It only serves to bar an action against the employer and insurance carrier. See
Mull v. Aetna Cas. &c. Co.,
2. The remaining enumeration of error is without merit.
Judgment affirmed.
