1. A motion to dismiss the bill of exceptions in this case is urged on the ground that no defendant in error *81 is specifically named therein. The bill of exceptions recites that “in the case of Esther E. Stowe against Gallant-Belk Co., a corporation of Franklin County, Georgia, and Gallant-Belk Co., a corporation of the State of South Carolina” the court sustained the general demurrers and dismissed the petition against both defendants, to which judgment the plaintiff excepts. Service was acknowledged by counsel as “attorneys for defendants in error.” “When the record shows clearly who were parties to the litigation in the court below, the writ of error shall not be dismissed because the bill of exceptions fails to specify or designate the parties plaintiff in error or defendant in error.” Code § 6-1202 as amended by Ga. L. 1957, p. 224. The motion to dismiss is denied.
2. “To set out a cause of action, the negligence of the defendant must be plainly and specifically set forth. The doctrine of
res ipsa loquitur
cannot be invoked to aid pleadings which are deficient in this respect.”
White v. Borders,
3. The plaintiff fell and sustained bodily injuries while crossing from one room to another in the defendant’s store on an inclined ramp, the levels of the two floors having an eight-inch height differential which was traversed by the ramp. Count 2 alleges that the plaintiff slipped on a banana peel and count 3 alleges that the defendants by negligently constructing the floors, one eight inches lower than the other, and erecting the inclined walkway “negligently created a hazard or risk to invitees and customers and that said situation was an inherently dangerous and perilous instrumentality,” and that the defendants were negligent in failing to equip the ramp with handrails or “notice of its location.”
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(a) Considering first the allegation in count 3 of the petition that the construction of two rooms one step different in floor level and connected by an inclined walkway constitutes a dangerous instrumentality, without any explanatory allegations of why it is dangerous, whether from defective construction, concealed location, slick or uneven surface or deceptive appearance, the plaintiff fails to show negligent or defective construction because the general allegation of danger is not supported by the specific facts pleaded. In
McMullan v. Kroger Co.,
(b) The plaintiff further alleges in count 2, that the defendant was negligent in leaving a banana peel on the ramp, and in
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count 3 that it negligently failed to provide the ramp with guardrails. Since the plaintiff makes no effort to show either that he did not see or for any reason could not in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety have seen both of these defects, they must be taken as patent and apparent to him, from which it follows that he was not in fact in the exercise of such care in descending the ramp. Counsel for the plaintiff in error urges that a general demurrer should have been overruled under authority of
Pilgreen v. Hanson,
None of the counts sets out a cause of action, and the trial court did not err in sustaining the general demurrers.
Judgment affirmed.
