1. A cause of action in
negligence
for property damage to the defective personal property itself is cognizable under Code Ann. § 105-106.
Eades v. Spencer-Adams Paint Co.,
The testimony for the plaintiff was that the design of the barn was "poor,” that it could have been designed to be stronger, that it was "under-designed” and of "marginal design”; the witness further testified that he did not have the information to determine whether the manufacture was proper and concluded that if he were designing the bam, he "would have done it a whole lot differently.” It is thus clear that the appellee’s verdict must stand or fall on the sufficiency of this witness’ testimony as to negligent design, there being none as to negligent manufacture.
The defendant-appellant’s expert disagreed with the testimony of the appellee, it being his opinion that the barn was not defectively designed. It has been held that no breach of duty as to product design is shown by evidence that experts disagree as to whether a particular design is proper. Dillingham v. Chevrolet Motor Co., 17 FSupp. 615. Likewise, proof of nothing more than that a particular injury would not have occurred had the product been designed differently is insufficient to establish a breach of the manufacturer’s duty as to design. Hatch v. Ford Motor Co.,
2. Error is urged upon the trial judge’s refusal to allow the appellant to elicit from its witness an answer to *322 the question of whether any other tobacco barns manufactured by it had ever failed.
Assuming without deciding that such a refusal was error
(see Evershine Products v. Schmitt,
3. Error is predicated upon the following charge: "The plaintiff also contends that the defendant failed to provide uniform support from the wheel assembly due to the omission of more than half of the attaching fasteners.” The complaint contains no such allegation to support this charge. The evidence as to the "attaching fasteners” is somewhat confusing, but having studied the transcript carefully it appears that there is
no
evidence that the appellant failed to provide the fasteners but there is evidence that the appellee may have attempted to move the barn without benefit of using the total number of fasteners provided by the appellant for such action. If so, not only was the charge error, as based upon a nonexisting contention of the appellee
(Ellison v. Robinson,
4. Can the appellee recover under a strict liability theory? A recent commentator has noted that "the trend nationally is against permitting such recovery of only economic losses in strict liability,” citing Seely v. White Motor Co.,
5. The remaining enumerations of error are not erroneous for any of the reasons urged or are not likely to recur in a new trial and are not ruled upon.
Judgment reversed.
