The declaration in attachment, filed in behalf of a 14-year old girl, for damages for personal injuries, • in eifect alleged: that while the defendant was engaged in grading and soiling a public road, its vice-principal in charge of the work negligently and wantonly and without necessity placed and left in and near the mouth of a public sewer on a described public road a highly explosive and dangerous dynamite cap, which was attractively wrapped in paper and placed in a small box; that a named boy, 12 years of age, attracted by its appearance, but, because of his tender years2 unaware of its nature or dangerous character, carried it to the home of the petitioner, who, being also of tender years and unaware of its dangerous cnaracter, took the dynamite cap from the boy, and in playing with it scratched it with a pin, causing an explosion which resulted in the injuries sued for.
1. If, as contended by counsel for the defendant in error, the defendant did not owe the plaintiff any legal duty which it neglected to perform, no action could he maintained for negligence on its part. Actionable negligence does not exist in the absence of the breach of some legal duty. Savannah &c. Ry. Co. v. Beavers, 113 Ga. 398 (
2. Nor can it be said, as a matter of law, that the negligence of the defendant, if there was negligence, did not constitute the proximate cause of the injury, but that the injury was brought about by the intervening-act of another. See Spires v. Goldberg, 26 Ga. App. 530 (
■Judgment reversed.
