The amendment to the petition setting forth the law of the State of Louisiana did not require a rehewal of the general demurrer to the petition. An immaterial amendment does not open the petition anew to demurrer. Code § 81-1312;
Pritchett
v.
Ellis,
201
Ga.
809 (
A construction of the petition against the pleader on demurrer requires the conclusion that the plaintiff was merely
requested
to ride the horse. He was not an employee and was
*402
under no compulsion whatever, assuming that would have made a difference. There was no demurrer to the petition on the ground that inconsistent causes allegedly caused the injuries. However that may be, we think that under the circumstances alleged the plaintiff was put on notice by the conduct of the horse that it might reasonably be expected to l’epeat the act of rearing up, whatever the cause might originally have been among the many alleged. The assurances by the person in charge of the horses were merely a matter of opinion, under the circumstances, and were relied on by the plaintiff at his peril. Without burdening the record with citations, the liability of owners and furnishers of animals has many times been based on a single manifestation of wildness or vicious propensity as notice to the owner or person furnishing the animal. If a single manifestation is sufficient to establish liability on the one hand, it seems reasonable that notice of such a fact by the one using the animal would defeat a recovery, especially where he is a volunteer, as in this case. We do not base our conclusion in this case upon the proposition that the plaintiff should have anticipated that the horse would rear up simply because it was a horse, any more than a nurse should anticipate that a child will bite (Johnson
v.
Butterworth, La. App., 1934,
The court did not err in sustaining the general demurrer to the petition and in dismissing the action.
Judgment affirmed.
