19 S.E.2d 196 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1942
Properly construed, the allegations of the petition as amended, in which recovery was sought from the defendant because of its breaking, while acting as an independent contractor in grading and leveling a lot in the City of Columbus, a gas pipe line eighteen inches underground and causing inflammable and explosive gases to escape therefrom and become ignited, and to severely burn the plaintiff, when in passing along a street which the lot adjoined he lighted a cigarette, failed to show that the plaintiff's injury was proximately caused by the violation of any duty owed by the defendant to the plaintiff. The petition as amended did not set forth a cause of action against the defendant, and the court did not err in sustaining the general demurrer thereto.
Subsequently the plaintiff dismissed the Georgia Power Company as a defendant, but did not strike any of the allegations of the petition as amended. The court then sustained a general demurrer of the defendant, Ready Mix Concrete Construction Company, to the petition as amended, and the exception here is to that judgment.
The petition charges the defendant with negligence in operating a steam shovel on the lot in question "in such a manner" that it came in contact with a pipe line containing explosive gases, which it describes as a negligent act in that the defendant failed to anticipate the presence of the pipe line, and should have so operated the steam shovel as to prevent the breaking of the pipe line and the escape of inflammable and explosive gas; that it was negligent in failing to warn the plaintiff and others that explosive gases were escaping and in failing to exercise ordinary care and caution to prevent the breaking of the pipe line. It alleges no actual knowledge by the defendant of the pipe line, but avers that it knew or in the exercise of ordinary care should have known of the existence of the pipe line on the lot, alleging that in the regular course of *720 its business of grading, surfacing, and leveling lots or plots of ground it knew that pipe lines were laid underneath the surface of the ground "on various and sundry lots in the City of Columbus," and that in using a steam shovel it would come in contact with such a pipe line carrying high and dangerous explosive gases, and knew or by the exercise of ordinary care and caution could have known of the existence of the pipe line on the lot in question, and that its employees or operators of the steam shovel, due to the universal use of gas by the public, should have anticipated the presence of a gas pipe on the lot, as was their duty to do, and the failure to so anticipate showed lack of care and caution, it being the duty of the operators of the shovel to so operate it as to prevent the breaking of the pipe line and further prevent the escape of inflammable and explosive gas.
Of course, the right to recover of the defendant depends upon the existence of three facts: (a) A legal duty resting on the defendant towards the plaintiff; (b) the violation of that duty by the defendant; (c) injury and damage to the plaintiff proximately resulting from the breach of the defendant. The petition fails to show any duty owed by the defendant to the plaintiff. It did not own the lot and was under no general duty to know of the presence of a pipe line beneath the ground. The allegations of the petition charge at most only constructive or implied notice to the defendant as to the existence of the pipe line or as to its duty to anticipate. Such allegations, without facts showing why the defendant should have known of or should have anticipated the presence of the pipe line on the lot, are not good against general demurrer. Smith v. Jefferson HotelCo. Inc.,
Judgment affirmed. Stephens, P. J., and Felton, J., concur.