While installing cable television wire on appellee-defendant’s property, appellant-plaintiff made contact with a live electrical wire. Appellant brought suit to recover for his injuries and, after discovery, appellee moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted appellee’s motion, and appellant appeals.
1. Where, as here, work is to be done within eight feet of a high-voltage line, OCGA § 46-3-33 (a) requires that the “person or persons responsible for the work to be done” give prompt notification to the owner or operator of the lines and provides that such person or persons will bear responsibility for the completion of the safety measures mandated by OCGA § 46-3-32. See also OCGA § 46-3-31. Appellant urges that a genuine issue of material fact remains as to appellee’s negligence per se in failing to fulfill these requirements.
OCGA § 46-3-30 (2) provides, in relevant part, that the “ ‘[p]erson responsible for the work to be done’ means a person, or his agent, who
physically
operates, erects, handles, stores, or transports any tools, machinery, equipment, supplies, materials, or apparatus . . . under, over, by, or near high-voltage lines. This term also means a person, or his agent,
who employs and carries on his payroll
any person who physically operates, erects, handles, stores, or transports any tools, machinery, equipment, supplies, materials, or apparatus . . . under, over, by, or near high-voltage lines. . . .” (Emphasis supplied.) Appellee did not come within this definition, as he neither physically installed any cable television wire himself, nor did he carry appellant on his payroll. “It seems clear that the persons and activities toward which [OCGA § 46-3-30 et seq.] is directed are those
businesses,
whether giant corporations or one-man concerns, whose
usual
activities would foreseeably bring their
employees
within close proximity to high voltage lines.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Savannah Elec. & Power Co. v. Holton,
Accordingly, the trial court did not err in finding that appellee was not a “person responsible for the work to be done” and was not, therefore, liable to appellant pursuant to OCGA § 46-3-30 et seq.
2. Appellant urges that a genuine issue of material fact remains as to appellee’s breach of the duty owed as a landowner.
“ ‘There is no liability from ownership alone, (cits.), or from joint
*471
ownership, (cit.), or from cotenancy, (cit.). It must appear that the injury resulted from a breach of some duty owed by the defendant to the injured party.’ [Cit.]”
Daniel v. Ga. Power Co.,
3. In light of our holding as to appellant’s first two enumerations of error, we need not address his final enumeration which alleges that the trial court erred in concluding that appellant assumed the risk as a matter of law.
Judgment affirmed.
