(After stating the foregoing facts.) It may be said at the outset that, in order to maintain her suit, the petitioner must show by her petition that she was injured through the actionable negligence of her employer, that such employer, prior to such injuries, had entered into a contract of indemnity with an insurance company, under which such a relation was created as would give her a right to bring suit upon the contract in her own name; and that the employer’s legal liability to her for the alleged damages had been established, or, in lieu thereof, that the same was not legally required under the contract.
In the reply brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error (petitioner), it is insisted that the relation of master and servant did not exist between her and her employer at the time she was injured, but had been temporarily suspended for her lunch hour. We have been unable to find a case from any of the courts of this State precisely in point on this question, and none has been cited. It is stated in the petition that the injury occurred to her while she was engaged in the performance of her customary duties as a typist and during her lunch hour, at a time and place provided by her employer, when she fell on the freshly waxed floor of the cafeteria. In
We shall now examine the petition to determine: if its allegations are sufficient when construed1 most strongly against the pleader — which we must do for purposes of the demurrer — to show actionable negligence on the part of the petitioner’s employer because, if not, under no other theory of the case can she-.prevail.
If there are dangers incident to an employment, unknown to- the servant, of which the master knows or ought to know, he shall give the servant wárning with respect thereto. Code, § 66-301. It is the duty of the master to exercise ordinary care to provide and maintain a reasonably safe place for his servant- to work.
Chenall
v.
Palmer Brick Co.,
117
Ga.
106 (
The order sustaining the demurrers is general and will be supported by any ground which is sufficient.. Any right of action, legal or equitable, which the petitioner may have against the defendant is wholly dependent upon a showing that her employer had become obligated to pay her damages for an injury inflicted because of its actionable negligence; and since we hold that the petition is insufficient to show such negligence, and that it was proper to sus *463 tain the demurrer for that reason, it becomes unnecessary to deal with other questions presented by the record.
Judgment affirmed.
