26 Ga. App. 550 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1921
1. The rule is well settled that where a question as to the sufficiency of the pleadings has been raised by demurrer, and the pleader seeks to conform to an adverse ruling by amending them so as to meet the objection and prevent a dismissal, he will not thereafter be heard to complain that the antecedent ruling to which he has thus submitted was erroneous, or that the amendment was unnecessary. Glover v. Savannah R. Co., 107 Ga. 34(3) (32 S. E. 876) ; Rome R. Co. v. Thompson, 101 Ga. 26 (28 S. E. 429); Hamer v. White, 110 Ga. 300 (34 S. E. 1001) ; Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Hart Lumber Co., 2 Ga. App. 88(2) (58 S. E. 316); Farrer v. Edwards, 144 Ga. 553 (87 S. E.
2. While it is the duty of the master to use ordinary care in seeing that the machinery furnished to his servants shall be reasonably safe for all persons who operate it with ordinary prudence, and that it shall be equal in kind to that in general use, it is nevertheless true that, in suits for injuries arising from the negligence of the master in failing so to do, it must appear that the master knew’ or ought to have known of such defects, and that the servant, injured “ did not know and had not equal means of knowing such fact, and by the exercise of ordinary care could not have known thereof.” Civil Code (1910), §§ 3130, 3131. While in the decision of this court in King v. Seaboard Air-Line Railway, 1 Ga. App. 88 (58 S. E. 252), followed in Brown v. Rome Foundry Co., 5 Ga. App. 142 (62 S. E. 720), Walton v. Ga., Fla. & Ala. Ry. Co., 12 Ga. App. 106 (76 S. E. 1060), Southern Ry. Co. v. Diseker, 13 Ga. App. 799 (81 S. E. 269), it was said that “A servant may recover from his master for an injury occasioned by a dangerous instru1 mentality negligently maintained by the master, although it appear that the servant was not ignorant of the existence of such dangerous instrumentality, if it is shown that at the time of the injury the servant was rendered oblivious or otherwise incapable of exercising his information as to the existence of the dangerous thing, on account of the engrossing character of. the work at hand or other excusing circumstances brought about by proper attention to duty, and not by his own carelessness,” this rule will not be extended so as to impose liability in a case in which the emergency was brought about solely by the negligent conduct of one acting in the capacity of a fellow servant, and where the nature of the emergency was not such as would divert the observation of the servant away from the dangerous instrumentality over which he had immediate and direct control, but on the contrary would direct his entire attention to it, and where the emergency itself was of such a trivial nature and character as could not possibly be held to have so distracted and engrossed the mind of the plaintiff as would obscure the exercise of the instinct of self-preservation. See, in this connection, Attleton v. Bibb Mfg. Co., 5 Ga. App. 777 (63 S. E. 918) ; Waldo v. Central of Ga. Ry. Co., 11 Ga. App. 484 (75 S. E. 821); Walton v. Ga. So. & Fla. Ry. Co., 15 Ga. App. 191(3) (82 S. E. 815).
Judgment affwmed.