103 Ga. App. 281 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1961
In Martin v. Seaboard Air Line R. Co., 101 Ga. App. 819 (115 S. E. 2d 248), the minor plaintiff’s petition through this mother as next friend, for damages arising from injuries when a steel rail fell from its supporting posts and injured him, was held subject to general demurrer. The present action is a companion case by the infant’s mother for loss of services and medical bills, and substantially the same facts are alleged with the additions herein noted. That opinion establishes that the minor in question was a licensee, that the attractive-nuisance doctrine was not involved, and that the railroad as a property owner was not liable on the wilful-negligence theory (such negligence being charged in both petitions) because “from the facts alleged, it is evident that the petition sets forth a situation where no injury would occur unless someone disturbed the static position of the rail and caused it to fall. Tihe facts alleged do not show that the
This petition deals with the same persons, the same transaction, and the- same alleged tort as does the Martin ca'se, supra. The allegations as to the manner of the child’s being on the railroad property, his purpose in being there, the fact that 'he and his companions attempted to Walk along the rail from one pole to another, and that after his companions left, the child continued to play on and around the rail, all remain unchanged. It follows that this petition, like the first petition, shows the child to (have been a licensee to whom under Code § 105-402 the defendant owed no duty except that of refraining from inflicting wilful and wanton injury upon him. While it is alleged that the railroad employees should have seen the child playing along the right-of-way, there is no allegation of either actual or constructive knowledge by such employees
Judgment affirmed.