20 Ga. App. 21 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1917
W. C. Dixon filed a suit against Mitchell County, in two counts. The first count, which the court below held good as against the county’s demurrer, alleged, in substance, that the plaintiff, on September -9, 1912, in the daytime, was driving in his buggy southward along a public road of Mitchell County, at a place where the public road crossed a stream, and where the county maintained a bridge over the stream; that the bridge was built since the year 1888, and that it consisted of a wooden structure about twenty feet long, measured along the said road, and earthen abutments for the same, extending from said wooden part northward and southward along said road; that while plaintiff was thus driving along on said abutment, the same being a part of the bridge, his buggy fell suddenly into a large hole about four feet wide, about four feet long, and three feet deep, which was about fifteen or twenty feet south of the wooden part of the bridge, and about twenty feet west of the central and most elevated part of said abutment; that by reason thereof plaintiff was thrown from his buggy and his buggy was overturned, and plaintiff was severely injured; that said defect in said abutment was known to the county commissioners and was not known to plaintiff, and that plaintiff, ■in February after said injury, orally presented his claim for his said injuries to said county commissioners in lawful meeting assembled, and said county commissioners then and there accepted such presentation of said claim and acted upon it, and promised ■ plaintiff that they would investigate said claim and advise him whether it would be paid, and that they did investigate and refused to pay it, and that, by reason of the foregoing facts, said county , commissioners waived presentation of said claim in writing and .estopped the county from setting up the defense that said claim had not been presented in writing. Plaintiff in said first count alleged.also that he had brought suit against the county within twelve months, and that service had been duly acknowledged by
The second count of the petition, which was stricken by the court upon demurrer, contained substantially the same allegations of fact set out in the first count, except tfiat the hole, into which' plaintiff’s buggy suddenly fell was alleged to be outside of the abutment and in the ground a few feet west of the west side of the said abutment, but it was averred that even though said hole were outside of the abutment, the county would be liable to him for his injury, by reason of certain facts set out in that count, in substance as follows: That said bridge over which plaintiff was passing at the time he was injured consisted of a wooden structure about twenty feet long, measured along said road, and about twelve feet wide, measured across said road, and about five feet above the general level of the ground on each side of said bridge. (The stream over which said bridge extended was what is known as a South Georgia “slough,” that is, a stream carrying a large body of water at certain seasons of the year, but having for the most of its length
To this petition the county demurred, (1) because the petition
In the main bill of exceptions Mitchell County excepts to the refusal to sustain the county’s demurrer to the first count of the plaintiff’s petition; and the cross-bill of exceptions, filed by the plaintiff, excepts to the judgment sustaining the county’s demurrer to the second count of his petition.
Considering the second count in the petition, we are very clear that it did not set forth a cause of action, and that the trial judge properly dismissed this count upon demurrer. The petition in Millwood v. DeKalb County, 106 Ga. 743 (32 S. E. 577), alleged that the county authorities had exercised the right, under the law, to work the convicts in a county chain-gang upon the public roads of the county; that a named road which crossed a private uvy- had been worked by the chain-gang in such a manner as that persons traveling the private way were liable to be injured, and that the plaintiff, in coming along the private way at night, having no knowledge of the condition in which the public road had been left at the point where the private way intersected it, fell and was injured. There were allegations that the county authorities had failed to pro
It is unnecessary to decide whether the plaintiff himself was the author of his own injury, in so far as the second count of the petition is concerned. Admitting that he was in no degree negligent (which we do not think is true, under the facts alleged in this -count of the petition), there is nevertheless no cause of action set out against the county, for the very simple reason that in the laws of this State there is no provision requiring or authorizing the county to maintain a private road or to provide a safe approach from its public highway to such private way. Certainly no statute, by express provision or necessary implication, gives to any person a. right of action against the county for injury sustained in traveling along a private way or in attempting to reach a private way from any public highway or bridge of the county.
. This court can not say that the abutment on which the plaintiff sustained his injury was not a part of the public bridge. This is an issue for the jury. If plaintiff’s injury was not the result of the negligence of the county in failure to keep the bridge in proper repair, then the plaintiff can not recover. If he was not in fact using that portion of the abutment which was both essential and necessary to the support and use of the bridge proper, at the time of his injury, he can not recover. This necessarily follows, since the county is liable only for its negligent failure to keep its bridge in repair. This liability does not attach to the county on account of its failure to keep its public road in repair. Nor can this court say, as a matter of law, that plaintiff’s injury was the result of his failure to exercise ordinary care. The fact that plaintiff had knowledge that the abutment to the bridge was in ill condition, that the county was then repairing it, and that his eyesight-was somewhat defective, are all matters which should go to the jury and should be weighed by the jury in determining whether or not the plaintiff was in the exercise of ordinary care and diligence for his own safety and protection at the time of his alleged injury. The mere fact that he had knowledge of the ill condition of the abutment to the bridge, and undertook to pass over it, will not, as a matter of law, bar his right to recover. The danger in attempting to pass over a public bridge may be so imminent, and the necessity for passing over it so slight, in a given case, that the court can pronounce the going over it negligence in law, barring the right of recovery for an injury sustained in attempting to pass over the bridge. Ordinarily, and as a general rule, the mere fact that one knows of a defect in a public bridge and undertakes to pass over it will not defeat his claim should he suffer injury thereby. If his act in so doing is not reasonably prudent, he can not, of course, recover. With knowledge of a defect in a public road one may continue to use it, but he is obliged to éxercise reasonable
We therefore conclude that the general and special demurrers to the first count of the petition were properly overruled, and that the general demurrer to the second count was properly sustained.
Judgment affirmed on loth lilis of exceptions.