1 Ga. App. 107 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
The plaintiff brought suit in the city court of Atlanta against the defendants for damages resulting from personal injuries received by him on the 7th day of June, 1904. That part of his petition illustrating the assignments of error to be considered is as follows: (2) That on the 7th day of June, 1904, petitioner was in the employ of the Candler. Investment Company, and was engaged at his work as a brick-mason, laying the foundation of an area wall in the bottom of an excavation of certain premises, on which was being erected what is known as the Candler Building, on Houston street, between Peachtree and Pryor streets, city of Atlanta, said county. (3) That said excavation was thirty feet deep-at the point where petitioner was at work, which was against the-
To this petition the defendants each filed a general demurrer. We will first consider the ease made by the petition as admitted by the general demurrer. We hold that the .petition is good in substance, the test of this being whether the defendants could admit all that is alleged and escape liability. Pullman Car Co. v. Marlin, 92 Ga. 164; Georgia Railroad Co. v. Rayford, 115 Ga. 937. That the allegations.in the petition are sufficient is shown by reference thereto. These allegations in substance are as follows: At the time of hi's injury, plaintiff was at work as a brick-mason, laying the foundation of an area wall in the bottom of an excavation, be
In addition to this general objection to the sufficiency of the ■declaration, the demurrants, O’Brien Brothers, filed an additional .ground of demurrer, as follows; “If said plaintiff has any claim or cause of action, arising from the several matters and things set forth in said petition as constituting a tort upon him, such claim ■or cause of action, as appears from the allegations of said petition, is against the Candler Investment Company, and not against these ■defendants jointly, or .either of them.” The court sustained the^ demurrer on this ground,'and this judgment is assigned as error. In support of this ground of demurrer, it is claimed that it affirmatively appears, from the allegations of the petition, that that portion of the excavation wherein the plaintiff was injured had been turned over by Morrow Transfer Company to the Candler Investment Company, and accepted by the Candler Investment Company, and that the latter company had put its men to work in the construction of the foundation, and that it was in the performance of this work that the plaintiff was injured. It is unquestionably a •sound principle of law that after the contractor has completed the work and turned it over to the owner, and it has been accepted by the owner in discharge of the contract, the contractor incurs no further liability by reason of the negligent manner in which the work has been done, but the responsibility, if any, for maintaining •or using it in its defective condition is shifted to the owner. The ■contractor remains liable, if at all, only to the proprietor or owner, for a breach of his contract. 1 Thornp. Neg., §§686, 687; Easton v. Smith, 26 L. R. A. 504. Before this responsibility is shifted from the -contractor to the proprietor or owner, it must be shown fihat the work was fully completed by the contractor; fully accepted by the owner of proprietor, and the contractor fully discharged of the contract. The specific allegations of the petition, relating to -this subject, are, “that at the time of the alleged injur}*- said work ■of excavating had not been completed, and was then being conducted and carried on; that it was agreed between Candler Investment Company and Morrow Transfer Company that the Candler Investment Company would waive their claim of twenty dollars
It is further insisted by defendants that the judgment of the court was right in sustaining the demurrer, because “the allegations set forth in the petition, as to the negligence of the defendants-in leaving a portion of the wall jutting out, show the position in which the plaintiff worked place him where he could see the wall, -and that he had full knowledge of the dangerous condition of the-place in which he was working.” The allegations of the petition on this point are, “that the petitioner did not know of the condition of said wall, and by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence-could not and did not discover the said condition of said wall.” The law did not impose upon the plaintiff the duty of making an inspection of the wall before he went to work, to determine whether it was in a safe condition. It did impose upon the contractor who made the excavation the duty of leaving the wall in a safe condition, especially in view of the other allegations of the petition that the defendants knew that the plaintiff was at work at the bottom of the excavation, beneath that portion of the wall which fell down upon him, by reason of the alleged negligent condition in which it was left. We think this question of negligence was within the province of the jurjq and could not be determined as matter of law, under the allegations made by the petition.
O’Brien Brothers demurred further, “because the several matters and things set forth in said petition as constituting the alleged
There are some other questions made in the record, relating to an alleged contract between Morrow Transfer Company and Candler Investment Company, but we do not think they are material to be decided by this court. The judgment of the court below in sustaining the demurrers of the defendants is reversed; the reversal, as to the demurrer of O’Brien Brothers, with direction that the plaintiff shall amend the petition as to them, in the matters indicated in this opinion, or the petition shall be dismissed as to them. Judgment reversed.