It is proper, where a pleading contains objectionable and irrelevant matter, for the trial court to require the litigant to replead and purge his petition of such matter.
Shaw v. Miller,
The petition as repleaded is identical with the matter contained in the original and the three amendments thereto with these exceptions: matter stricken by special demurrer is deleted, and some paragraphs are renumbered. Because certain special demurrers on which error was assigned attacked the constitutionality of a statute, this court transferred the bill of exceptions to the Supreme Court, acting in view of its interpretation of
Ray Clanton’s East Georgia Motors, Inc. v. Conaway,
It is well established that while it is contrary to public policy to permit parties to a contract to establish by agreement
inter sese
what acts in the performance of the agreement would set the standard of ordinary carе as to third parties not signa
*535
tories thereto who are injured during its performance,
State Construction Co. v. Johnson,
This petition by the widow alleges that her husband, while a guest upon the premises of others not parties to this action, was electrocuted when, while swimming in a lake on the premises, he attempted to climb a metal ladder leading to his hosts’ dock and received an electric shock caused by the negligence of the defendant who had, pursuant to a contract with the owners, installed lights in the dock area but had negligently failed to insulate the electric conductors properly, with the result that a short circuit occurred, the dock rails and ladder became electrified, and the deceased received a fatal charge of electricity through the ladder when he attempted to pull himself out of the water. One of the contract provisions was that all work should be performed in accordance with the requirements of the National Electric Code. Paragraph 12 sets out pertinent Code provisions, and paragraph 19 (e) alleges negligence in failing to install the wiring in accordance therewith. There are no demurrers applicable to paragraphs 12 and 19 (e) of the re-pleaded petition, so the question of whether the plaintiff could rely on negligence of the defendant in failing to comply with the National Electric Code is not presented. Since the contract *536 constitutes matter of inducement germane to the cause of action it was not error to overrule the special demurrers to paragraph 4. It is further alleged that while the original contract provided for “no wiring for boathouse or dock,” it did provide for change-orders, and that the boathouse and dock were subsequently wired pursuant to change-order. Since it appears from the petition that the dock and boathouse installation constituted a single work unit (the petition speaks of a single “wiring system” with underground connector and a light switch controlling the dock and boаthouse lights placed between the two structures), no valid objection exists to pleading and proving that neither installation was grounded. This ruling applies to demurrers 13 (a) and 26.
Paragraphs 9, 11 and 19 (a) allege that the defendant was negligent in failing to providе any ground for the electric wiring at the boathouse or dock. In view of the allegations of paragraph 18 that grounding of such a system is recognized and accepted by the electrical industry as a basic necessity for the safety and prоtection of human life, and that defendant failed to observe a basic safety practice, the allegation is not a conclusion. Special demurrers 13 (b), 17 and 28 were properly overruled. The same ruling applies to special dеmurrers 18, 27, and 30 to paragraphs 11, 18, 19 (c) and 30 of the petition.
Special demurrers 33 and 34 complain of the plaintiff’s characterization of the ladder on which her husband was electrocuted as being a “lurking death trap” on the sole ground that it is a conclusion without supporting factual allegations. The language is vivid, perhaps inflammatory, but it is a conclusion well justified by the factual averments that, due to the defendant’s negligence, uninsulated wires carrying an electric charge were allоwed to come in contact with a metal railing, along which the current proceeded to the metal ladder and presumably down the ladder to the water. The swimmer, grasping the ladder in search of safety, met instead with fatal peril. The languagе is certainly supported by the facts stated, and this objection is without merit. The petition states a cause of action for the death of the plaintiff’s husband. The remaining special demur *537 rers not dealt with herein are either moot or have been abandoned by the plaintiff in error.
In the cross-bill of exceptions error is assigned on the overruling of numerous special demurrers to the defendant’s answer. “Assignments of error not insisted upon by counsel in their briefs or otherwise argued in this court will be treatеd as abandoned. A mere recital in the brief of counsel of the existence of an assignment of error, without argument or citation of authorities in its support, is insufficient to save it from being treated as abandoned.
Head v. Lee,
The plaintiff argues only her genеral demurrer to paragraph 20 of the answer, which alleges: “At the time [defendant’s] employees installed electrical wiring on the dock of Willard B. Joy there was no ladder of any kind on or attached to said dock. If, as alleged by the plaintiff, оn the evening of August 12, 1961, plaintiff and her late husband, Paul Berry, were invited to the home of the said Willard B. Joy and about midnight, when the lights of the dock were on, just before plaintiff and her late husband were to leave to return home, the said Paul Berry went for a short swim in Lake Oliver from said dock; if he swam around to near the ladder and, unaware of any danger, took hold of said ladder with both hands to ascend from the water and upon doing so received a severe electrical shock from which he slumped over into the water at the base of the ladder where he died; and if the direct and proximate cause of his death was the electrical shock received by him; then the installation of said ladder by parties unknown to defendant intervened betweеn the wiring work of defendant and the alleged electrocution of the said Berry and constituted the proximate cause of the electrocution of the said Berry, if he was, as plaintiff alleges, electrocuted by touching said ladder.”
Upon the principle that persons are responsible for the usual and natural results of their acts, one may be liable for an injury resulting from his negligence although he could not reasonably have anticipated the particular injury inflicted, or that the рarticular person would be injured.
Mitchell v. J. S. Schofield’s
*538
Sons Co.,
Judgment affirmed on the main bill of exceptions. Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part on cross-bill.
