This is а wrongful-death action being prosecuted by the mother of a child who drowned in a creek in Columbus, *201 Georgia. The City of Columbus is named as defendаnt. In the complaint, there are requests for injunctive relief. The allegations of the complaint are essentially as follows:
On June 6, 1978, Natаsha T. Tamas, the seven-year-old daughter of the plaintiff, was traveling across a bridge, which runs over the creek on Amber Drive in Columbus. Amber Drive extеnds beyond the edges of the bridge in a downward sloping fashion so that the asphalt from the road forms a slanting path for drainage from the road into the creek. There exists a cliff, established by the base of a trеe, at the bottom of the asphalt from said roadway on the northwеst portion of the bridge. The creek does not have any fencing bаrriers, obstructions, or curbing to prevent parties from falling from the roаd or the areas immediately adjacent thereto; nor are there any signs or warning devices to warn travelers of the dangerous prоpensities of the creek. As the plaintiff s daughter was traveling across the bridge, she ventured down the steep slope to the creek below. She thereafter slipped on the banks of the creek and fell into the creek. As a result, she incurred fatal injuries by drowning.
The plaintiff alleges in the complaint that the sole and proximate cause of her daughter’s drowning was the defendant city’s negligence in failing to maintain the road in a safe condition, thereby creating a continuing nuisance.
Upon consideration of the pleadings and other matters outsidе of the pleadings, the trial court entered judgment in the city’s favor. 1 The plaintiff appeals. Held:
"Where municipal corporations are not required by statute to pеrform an act, they may not be held liable for exercising their discretiоn in failing to perform the same.”
Code § 69-302.
It was on this premise that liability was predicated in
Town of Ft. Oglethorpe v. Phillips,
However, in
Englander v. City of East Point,
We find the present case to be an example of discretionary nonfeasance on the part of the defendant city. As a matter of law, the defendant city is not liable to the plaintiff. The trial court did not err in ruling in the defendant’s favor.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
In the trial court’s order, the court states that the plaintiff introduced several photographs showing the bridge and creek on Amber Drive. The court notes that these photographs indicate that guard rails are рlaced on the bridge itself. It is the drainway area from the road down to the creek which contains no guard rails or warning signs.
