8 S.E.2d 590 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1940
1. Under the circumstances of this case, the repairing of the thing in question, the back doorsteps, was of such normal character upon a thing the natural constituents and general characteristics of which were so simple and ordinary that any normal person (the servant) would not only have comprehended what accident, if any, would likely occur as well as any other normal person (the master), but also as well as any skilled carpenter.
2. The servant, taking active part with the master in repairing the steps, assumed the risk, if any, arising from the failure of the master to do his duty on the day of and at the time of the repairing of the steps, because an ordinary person would necessarily have known of the failure. 4 Labatt on Master Servant, 3680. The risk which the servant assumed at the time of the repairing was within the comprehension of any adult of ordinary intelligence, irrespective of the question whether she had or had not any special experience in the work in which they were engaged at the time of the repairing.
3. If the servant produced or assisted in producing the conditions by something she herself had done in connection with the performance of her *891 duties or incidental thereto, if she did not specifically know how far the defect (of which she was already aware) had developed on the day of the accident, it was within her general knowledge as something likely to occur.
4. The preliminary facts pleaded do not warrant the conclusion of the pleader that they established the ultimate fact that the knowledge of the skilled and experienced carpenter (the master) would have been superior to the knowledge of the normal person of average intelligence (the servant) as to what might likely occur as a result of the repairs of the character made.
It seems to us, construing the petition most strongly against the pleader, that the tread was in a "rotten condition" at the time of the repairing of the steps approximately twelve months before the injury, in which repairing the plaintiff participated "in the manner and under the express direction of the defendant who supervised the repairing, and with the tools and materials furnished her by the defendant; and petitioner shows that the defendant marked off the wood used in repairing the steps, showing petitioner where to saw it, and that defendant placed and held the nails so that petitioner could hammer them in place." Thus, at the time of the repairing of the steps, the servant's opportunity or means of obtaining knowledge of the material conditions which created any risk at that time were the same as that of the master. Whatever defects were brought about by the repair of the steps, and which might have brought about a risk at that time, were within the comprehension of any adult of ordinary intelligence, irrespective of the question whether he had or had not any special experience or training in the repair work, which they together had done on that occasion. While the servant, before the time of this repair, was under no obligation to inspect, and did not assume the risk from the failure of the master to do his duty, unless the servant knew of that failure and of the attendant risk, when the servant and the master together repaired the steps on that occasion the result of any risk arising from that repair was within the comprehension of any adult of ordinary intelligence. The servant knew of the master's failure (if any) to inspect at the time of the repairing and of the attendant risk (if any); so if the injury had occurred thereafter on that day or the next day, the servant could not recover. Whatever defect the steps had at the time of the repair she knew, or it was deemed to be in her comprehension; for she assisted in *893 repairing this simple and ordinary thing, and was fully acquainted with the details of the construction of the steps as repaired, or at least as to the construction of that part of the steps which she claimed was defective.
If the servant produced or assisted in producing the conditions by something she herself had done in connection with the performance of her duties or incidental thereto, to wit, the building or repairing of the steps, her action is not maintainable where she used, for a period of approximately twelve months, the defective steps which she helped to construct or repair, the steps being such a simple and ordinary thing that any person of ordinary skill and knowledge would know, as well as a person of highest skill and technical training, that the rotten tread through which she drove the nails while the master held them in place, would likely cause an accident and injury to persons using the steps. If she did not specifically know how far the defect (of which she was presumably aware) had developed on the day of the accident, it was within her general knowledge as something likely to occur. The doctrine of the "assumption of skill" on the part of the master is not applicable. Hines v.Little,
In Atlantic Birmingham Railroad Co. v. Reynolds,
Judgment reversed. Broyles, C. J., and Guerry, J., concur.
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