30 Ga. App. 490 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1923
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
It is insisted by the plaintiff in error that the child was an invitee, and by the defendant in error that it was a trespasser. We think, it -was neither, but rather a licensee. There is no allegation that the child was invited to the store, and no facts are set forth from which an invitation to a child of its age could be implied. The visit of the mother was for the purpose of making a purchase for herself and not for the child. Its presence was merely the choice of the mother, for the pleasure or convenience of herself or the child. The child did not go to the store to trade. An invitation of the owner or occupant of premises is implied by law where the person goes on the premises for the benefit real or supposed of the owner or occupant, or in a matter of mutual interest, or in the usual course of business, or for the performance of some duty. To constitute one person an invitee of the other there must be some mutuality of interest.
A licensee is a person who is neither a customer, nor a servant, nor a trespasser, and does not stand in any contractual relation with the owner of the premises, and who is permitted expressly or impliedly to go thereon merely for his own interest, convenience, or gratification. See Crossgrove v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co.,
The court can not judicially know that children are invited by a merchant to come with their parents to the store merely for a purchase by the parent for the parent, but can take notice, as a matter of common knowledge, that they are permitted or licensed so to do. Where a mother is invited to come and trade, her children are commonly permitted to accompany her. Matters of fact of which judicial notice is taken need not be alleged. Cedartown Cotton & Export Co. v. Miles, 2 Ga. App. 79, 81 (58 S. E. 289); 6 Standard Enc. Procedure, 680, § 9.
Under the averments of the petition the rest room is to be considered as a part of the store. A member of the general public of the class usually allowed to enter a store who enters lawfully and peacefully, although not a customer actual or anticipatory at the time, does not, unless admission has been forbidden him, thereby become a trespasser, but is a licensee. Rollestone v. Cassirer, 3 Ga. App. 161 (59 S. E. 442). The plaintiff in this case was clearly a licensee, and not an invitee. It is positively alleged that the rest room was maintained for the use of the defendant’s patrons. The later indirect averment that the plaintiff’s mother assumed that the machine in a public place in which the public and patrons of the defendant were invited to come was not a trap to catch the naturally curious fingers of children can not be held to enlarge the averment that the rest room was merely for the use of patrons, but the term “public” will be held to imply that part of the public comprising the defendant’s patrons. This construction, in our opinion, is proper under the rule that pleadings are to be construed most strongly against the author.
In the case of a trespasser “liability arises only where the injury has been occasioned by the wilful and wanton negligence of the proprietor or owner. No duty of anticipating his presence is imposed; and, as was pointed out by this court in Charleston & W.
“After the presence of the licensee is known, exactly the same acts of caution may be required of the proprietor to satisfy the legal duty as would be necessary if the licensee were invited. Indeed, we can conceive that the owner of lands on which a dangerous thing exists may be in legal duty bound to use a greater quantum of precaution in behalf of an infant licensee- thereon than he would in behalf of an adult invited guest. The sum of the whole matter is included in the expression frequently enunciated that ‘ duties arise out of circumstances.’ ” Rollestone v. Cassirer, supra. A careful reading of this case will demonstrate that if we are correct in saying that the plaintiff was a licensee, the petition was good against demurrer. It is alleged that the device was as to a child of tender years attractive and at the same time inherently dangerous, with a basis of fact set forth, and that it was negligently placed where a child could reach it, although it is customary to place such a machine at a height of 60 inches. The child was not a trespasser; and it is a question for the jury to determine whether,
It is urged in the demurrer that the plaintiff’s injury was the result of the negligence of her mother, but the negligence of the mother is not imputable to the child where the child itself is the plaintiff. Civil Code (1910), § 3475.
The general demurrer was improperly sustained. The allegation that the machine was operated for profit was not objectionable as being irrelevant; and the indirect averment that the public and patrons of the defendant were invited to the rest room was not subject to the special demurrer interposed thereto, since we construe the allegation as including merely the defendant’s patrons.
Our ruling is not an extension or even an application, of the doctrine of the turn-table cases, which goes upon the theory that a railroad company, when setting before children a temptation which it has reason to believe will lead them into danger, must use ordinary care to protect them from harm. The notion is that young children are not trespassers except in the technical sense, and that they are lured to become such at all by the temptation set before them amounting impliedly to an invitation. As we have undertaken to point out, the plaintiff in the instant case was not a trespasser, either in fact or in theory, either technically or morally, but was lawfully at the place in question, not by invitation, but by permission. We think this distinction will differentiate this case from the several authorities cited by the defendant in error in support of its contention that the demurrer was properly sustained. In the “ velocipede ” case (Atlantic
In the case of Plummer v. Dill, 156 Mass. 426, a licensee in the defendant’s building was injured by striking her head upon a projecting sign placed upon a post at the corner of a landing. If circumstances had been alleged raising an inference that the defendant owed the plaintiff any care to anticipate her presence, and that the instrument to an adult was a hidden peril, the decision in that case might have been different. As to this we only can conjecture, but it suffices that the facts there alleged are materially different from those of the case here considered. In the ease of Fleckenstein v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 102 Atl. 700 (1), a licensee in a store (accompanying one who went to purchase) was struck by a missile from a box of canned goods being opened by an employee near by in the store. The presence of the licensee was known, but there was no suggestion that the occurrence was one likely to occur or that the act of opening the box in the manner alleged was inherently dangerous. The majority opinion in the case of United Zinc & Chemical Co. v. Britt, 258 U. S. 268 (42 Sup. Ct. Rep. 299), merely restricts the principle of the turn-table cases, while the dissent apparently carries the doctrine further than the courts of this State have consented to go. Neither view is here pertinent. Likewise the other cases
On the other hand, the cases of Miller v. Peck Dry Goods Co., 104 Mo. App. 609 (78 S. W. 682), and Hillerbrand v. May Mercantile Co., (Mo.) 121 S. W. 326, cited by the plaintiff in error to sustain her contention that slie was an invitee, are not applicable, for the reason that in each the relation was distinctly alleged. Under the petition as drawn in the case at bar, the plaintiff must be held to show only the duty of the defendant to her as a licensee.
The writer has been impressed with the suggestion that to uphold the petition would constitute the defendant a nursery, and, candidly, was long of the opinion that no cause of action was set forth, but is forced by a careful study of the' authorities to adopt a different view.
Judgment reversed.