15 S.E.2d 797 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1941
The plaintiff's petition, construed most strongly against her, does not show that the defendant was lacking in ordinary care in keeping the premises and approaches safe, as required by the Code, § 105-401. The judge erred in overruling the general demurrer to the petition, and in failing to dismiss the action. The other proceedings in the case were nugatory.
The actual result of an act or omission is not controlling in determining whether or not it was negligent, nor is the duty of the person doing or omitting to do an act to be estimated by what, after an injury has occurred, then first appears to be a proper precaution; but the question of negligence must be determined according to what should reasonably have been anticipated, in the exercise of ordinary care, as likely to happen. 45 C. J. 660, § 28. "It is not uncommon for a person to fall downstairs when there is no defect in the stairway or its covering. A heel may catch on the edge of the stair, or the carpet, and a fall result. The fault rests, not with the stairway, but with the person who so placed his foot. Too often, the accident having so happened, such a person seeks a *337 `defect' through which to pin upon another the damage flowing from his own lapse. The frequency of that situation led one justice, during argument of an appeal, to make the ironic comment that `They always find it.' There are, of course, many stairway cases involving honest claims. Some of them are based upon dangerous construction, far more upon negligent maintenance. . .Negligent maintenance may involve a great variety of defects; a broken tread, a hole in the tread, defective metal covering, debris, snow and ice, torn carpet, and the like. But the defective step must be identified with the plaintiff's fall, andnotice of the defective condition must be brought home to the party sought to be charged." (Italics ours.) 4 Shearman and Redfield on Negligence, (rev. ed.) 1820, 1822, § 797.
The acts of negligence here complained of were of maintenance, and the case should not be confused with cases where the negligence complained of was improper construction which makes the person charged with liability liable whether he knew of the defects in original construction or not. See Monahan v.National Realty Co.,
In the instant petition, the defendant, as operator and owner of the store in question and charged with negligently maintaining the steps in the building, was alleged to have had only constructive or implied knowledge of the alleged defects, for the petition charged that the defendant "knew, or in the exercise of ordinary care and diligence could have known," of the alleged dangerous and unsafe condition of the step. Flynn v. Inman,
Our Supreme Court, in City of Brunswick v. Glogauer,
It should be borne in mind that the owner or occupier of the building is not an insurer. Coffer v. Bradshaw,
(65 S.E. 712). As has been said in one case, "What the law requires is not warranty of the safety of everybody from everything, but such diligence toward making the store safe as a good business man is in such matters accustomed to use." Hart v. Grennell,
It appears from the allegations in the instant case that the defendant did not have actual knowledge of the alleged dangerous and unsafe condition, and the plaintiff based her petition not on the theory of defective construction but on the theory of maintenance in a dangerous and unsafe condition, and that it was the defendant's absolute duty to inspect and discover said condition for the purpose of keeping same in repair. Therefore, in the absence of actual knowledge of the condition of the steps, the ridges on which appeared to be "merely three dark streaks running along the edges of each step, and flush with the surface thereof," it would seem that to require the defendant in inspecting the steps to "stoop down and make a very close and careful examination by sighting along the surface of said steps to observe that said ridges rise in place above the surface of the steps," in order to ascertain if, contrary to appearances, the steps were in fact in a dangerous and unsafe condition, would be to demand the exercise of a most extraordinary degree of diligence. Thus, where, as here, there was no actual knowledge of the alleged dangerous and unsafe condition, and there is nothing in the petition to show or indicate the propriety or necessity of making an inspection to ascertain the possible or probable existence of any defect, such as that other people had tripped or fallen on the steps, ordinary diligence did not as a matter of law, under the facts alleged, require an inspection where the defendant had no reason to think an inspection was necessary. SeeWilliamson v. Kidd, supra.
The judge erred in overruling the demurrer and in failing to dismiss the petition. The other proceedings in the case were nugatory.
Judgment reversed. Broyles, C. J., and Gardner, J., concur. *341