The action is one ex delicto and not one ex contractu. While the plaintiff sets out in his petition a copy of the sales agreement between himself and the defendant Altman, which contained the agreement as to the installation of the furnace, he does not predicate his action on a breach of a contract provision or of an express duty undertaken by Altman under the contract. The contract was alleged to show that the plaintiff and Altman stood in the relationship of vendor and vendee, and to show that Altman owed to the plaintiff the peculiar duties owed by a vendor to a vendee, and it is for the violation of one of these peculiar duties which arose by reason of their relation
*888
ship that the plaintiff sued.
Rushin
v.
Central of Ga. Ry. Co.,
128
Ga.
726 (
Over and beyond the obligation in contracts, it is fundamental that every person owes a duty to exercise ordinary care not to supply by sale, lease, etc., a thing, instrumentality, or building which is so defectively constructed or conditioned as to be imminently dangerous to the person to whom supplied or subject to damages itself by reason of its condition.
Moody
v.
Martin Motor Co.,
76
Ga. App.
456 (
While ordinarily an independent contractor is relieved of liability where the work contracted for is accepted by the owner, an exception applies when the work is so defectively done as to be imminently dangerous.
Moody
v.
Martin Motor Co.,
supra;
Davey
v.
Turner,
55
Ga. App.
786 (
The principle above discussed has been applied in this State as to personal injuries. We see no reason why it should not be applied to a case where the breach of duty resulted in loss of property and where, but for the fortuitous working of fate, the loss of life or serious personal injury might have resulted.
The petition alleges that the defendants’ individual negligence combined to produce the plaintiff’s injuries; therefore the defendants are joint tortfeasors as to the plaintiff, and can be joined as defendants in a single action.
Hopkins
v.
City of Atlanta,
172
Ga.
254 (
The negligence of the defendant Altman did not become the superseding sole proximate cause of the injury because it does not appear that Altman sold the house with actual knowledge of the contractor’s negligence. We cannot say as a matter of law that the plaintiff was negligent in not discovering the defect and avoiding the consequences thereof and that such negligence was the sole proximate cause of his injuries, when he had the right to presume that permits had been granted and proper inspections made.
The plaintiff alleged that the flame from the beam or moulding spread through the furnace room to the back bedroom, where the plaintiff’s eleven-year-old son was sleeping, and to the entire attic of the house, and that after the flame was discovered, the plaintiff made two attempts to save his son from the smoke and flames in said bedroom before he was able to carry him to safety. The plaintiff further alleges: that the defendants’ negligence resulted in agonizing fright and anxiety to the plaintiff, arising out of his fear for the safety of his Wife and four small children; that the natural consequence of the shock of such fear was a mental anguish which the plaintiff suffered over the safety and welfare of his family; that the mental anguish and anxiety continues by reason of the concern the *890 plaintiff still has for the welfare of his children and his wife, who are still suffering from the shock caused by such negligence. Special demurrers to the allegations of mental pain and suffering were sustained, and these allegations were stricken. This judgment is excepted to in the cross-bill of exceptions.
The plaintiff contends that he is entitled to damages for mental pain and suffering, because (1) there was an injury to his “purse,” in that he suffered financial loss in the burning of his house; and (2) the defendants’ negligence amounted to “recklessness, wantonness, a complete want of care, absolute disregard for the safety of others and a conscious, callous indifference to the consequences of such negligence.” Many cases state that a person cannot recover damages for mental pain and suffering in cases where mere negligence is the basis of the action unless there is present an injury to the person or “his purse,” or where there is an injury to the person or he suffers “pecuniary loss.”
We think that the plaintiff has misinterpreted what is meant by an injury to a person’s purse. The probable keystone of our law on this matter is
Chapman
v.
Western Union Telegraph Co.,
88
Ga.
763 (
The court did not err in overruling the general demurrers to the petition, and in sustaining the special demurrers to the allegations of mental pain and suffering.
Judgments affirmed.
