100 Ga. 163 | Ga. | 1897
Smith brought an action against the Clarke Hardware Company, to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him by reason of the explosion in his face of a cartridge purchased from said company. In his declaration the plaintiff alleges, substantially, that lie applied to an employee of the defendant company for a particular kind of loaded cartridges, to wit No. 38 calibre for a Winchester rifle, and that defendant’s agent to sell negligently gave to plaintiff certain loaded cartridges which were represented to be of the kind and calibre asked for, and which were in fact very similar in size, make and mark to those desired, but were in reality'of different calibre and manufactured and intended for use in altogether a different firearm. It is alleged, that notwithstanding the cartridges
To this action the defendant demurred upon the grounds: (1) That no cause of action is set up in said petition. (2) The petition shows upon its face that the negligence of the; plaintiff caused the damage complained of in said petition. (3) The petition shows upon its face that by the exercise of ordinary care the plaintiff could have avoided the injury which he complains of in said petition. This demurrer was-sustained by the court below, and the action dismissed; to-which ruling the plaintiff excepts.
The second and third grounds of the demurrer are obviously untenable. It is inconsistent to admit all the allega- • tions of the plaintiff’s petition, as the demurrer does, and' yet contend that the petition shows on its face that -the negligence of plaintiff caused the damage, or that the injury could have been avoided by the exercise of ordinary care on the part of the plaintiff. It is manifest from the allegations' contained in the petition, that it cannot be adjudged as matter of law that the plaintiff was negligent. The character of his allegations is such that, 'with defendant’s liability in other respects established, the points raised by the second and third grounds of the demurrer are questions of fact which should be submitted to and determined by a jury. We therefore come to consider the single question: does the petition-
While in the sale of cartridges, ammunition and other devices to be used in firearms, the degree of care required may not be so great, nor the scope of liability so far-reaching, as in. the sale of poisonous drugs, by reason of the fact that the ■ dangers attending .the former are not so imminent as those attending the latter, there being in all probability much less
Judgment reversed.