This is a personal injury action brought by Leslie E. Herrin, Jr., as next friend of David Herrin against Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Lamar. Simply stated, the petition alleged *92 that the minor plaintiff was run over and injured by a riding lawn mower operated by defendants’ ten-year-old daughter in the presence of and under instructions from the defendant wife. The parties were next-door neighbors and the incident occurred on the defendants’ front lawn. The defendants’ general demurrer was sustained.
The first matter to be decided is the duty owed by the defendants to the minor plaintiff. The petition alleges that it was “customary and the common occurrance” (sic) for the minor plaintiff and the defendants’ children to play in the yards of each other. There seems to be no- Georgia case adjudicating whether the plaintiff was an invitee or licensee under these facts. While there are many cases holding that an invitation may be implied by “known, customary use,” e.g.,
Anderson v. Cooper,
However, “the ultimate result so far as the question of the degree of care due the plaintiff is the same under the peculiar circumstances pleaded whether he was a licensee or an invitee” because, after the owner of property becomes aware of or should anticipate the presence of the licensee, the duty is on the owner to exercise ordinary care to avoid injuring him.
Cooper v. Anderson,
The duty owed plaintiff minor, then, was one of ordinary care. Was the duty violated? The allegations of negligence are:
“ (1) In permitting a child of such tender age to use the lawn mower in their front yard when they knew that [plaintiff minor] was present.
“ (2) In furnishing the said lawn mower to- said child of such tender years and permitting her to- use same under the circumstances and conditions hereinabove alleged.”
We think the duty of ordinary care was clearly violated *93 by' the defendants’ daughter. The only question remaining is that of the defendants’ liability under the circumstances here for the acts of their daughter.
The Code has long made provision concerning liability for the torts of one’s child.
Code
§ 105-108. (For the history of this section, see
Curtis v. Ashworth,
None of these cases involves riding, rotary cutting, power lawn mowers. Since the advent of such lawn mowers in the recent past, there is a paucity of Georgia cases concerning these instrumentalities and those decided have involved injuries re
*94
ceived because of the missile-launching propensities of the rotary mowing action.
1
See
Taylor v. Atlanta Gas Light Co.,
Apparently the only cases allowing recovery against a parent for the injury inflicted by a minor child are
Faith v. Massengill,
Plaintiff here relies solely on Davis where the petition was held to have stated a cause of action against the parents of a five-year-old child who, while riding a velocipede on a sidewalk at night ran into the plaintiff. The court there held in headnote 1 that “allegations to the effect that the parents furnished the velocipede to the child and knowingly permitted him to ride it upon the sidewalk under the circumstances indicated, and the child, who on account of his tender years was irresponsible, incompetent, and unqualified to use the velocipede with such *95 care and diligence as not to injure the plaintiff, used the velocipede and negligently collided with the plaintiff were equivalent to alleging that the parents were negligent in knowingly permitting a child of such age to use the velocipede in the manner stated, and charge actionable negligence on the part of the parents.”
Parental liability is dependent upon agency principles, the parent not being liable for a tort “with which he was in no way connected, which he did not ratify, and from which he did not derive any benefit.”
Chastain v. Johns,
It was error to sustain the defendants’ general demurrers.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
See, for information and as a matter of interest, American Standards Association-Outdoor Power Equipment Institute Safety Rules, obtainable from American Standards Association, 10 E. 40th St., New York 16, N. Y., reprinted in The American Home, April 1962, p. 30, and a discussion of the increasing problem occasioned by rotary mowers in Time, May 4, 1962, p. 56..
