24 Ga. App. 664 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1920
On June 26, 1917, I. M. Eoberts and J. P. Brooke brought suit against the Georgia Eailway and Power Com
The evidence shows that in the year 1902 the Atlanta Water & Electric Company, a corporation chartered under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Georgia, constructed what is known as the Bull Sluice dam, that the said dam and plant were for the purpose ©f generating electricity by water to be used for the purpose of lighting towns and cities and supplying motive power to railroads and street-car lines, and supplying power to the public for the operation of plants and for general lighting purposes. The evidence further showed that at the time of the construction of said dam in the year 1902 the property now owned by the plaintiffs and for damage to which the suit at bar was instituted was owned by the Laurel Hill Manufacturing Company; that this company went into bankruptcy, and on August 5, 1911, the trustee in bankruptcy
The court did not err in ordering the nonsuit and dismissing the case. The evidence shows that no change in the dam or the construction thereof was made by the Georgia Railway & Power Company after it acquired the same. In Middlebrooks v. Mayne, 96 Ga. 450 (2) (23 S. E. 398), the Supreme Court said: “While one who erects and maintains a nuisance under circumstances rendering him liable in damages to another whose property is thereby injured may be sued without notice to abate the nuisance, an alienee of the person erecting such nuisance must have such notice, and refuse to comply with it, before becoming liable for simply maintaining the nuisance as it existed when he purchased the property on which it was located (italics ours). Such notice, however, would not be essential to the maintenance of an action against
Judgment affirmed.