140 Ga. 459 | Ga. | 1913
.1- On demurrer this petition is to be construed most strongly against the plaintiff. The allegations that the defendants knew, or ought to have known, that the place was unsafe, amount to no more than a charge of implied notice that the place was unsafe. Babcock Lumber Co. v. Johnson, 120 Ga. 1030 (6), 1034 (48 S. E. 438); Fraser v. Smith & Kelly Co., 136 Ga. 18 (70 S. E. 792). The general charge that the plaintiff’s husband was free from fault, and by the exercise of ordinary care could not have prevented the injury to himself, when considered in connection with the other allegations of the petition in regard to the work which he was doing, and his opportunity to see and know the dangers of the place, are mere conclusions of the pleader, and add nothing to the special facts alleged upon which the court is to pass in determining whether the husband was free from fault, and whether by the exercise of ordinary care he could have prevented the injury to himself. There being no allegations to the contrary, it must be assumed that he was of ordinary intelligence and skilled
2. The case involves the further principle of assumption by the servant of the ordinary risks of the employment, against the dangers of which he is bound to exercise his own skill and diligence to prevent injury to himself. The plaintiff’s husband was employed to make a ditch. This involved the creation of the danger from which he suffered injury. He was bound to know that under natural laws there would be more or less danger of the sides caving in as the work of deepening the ditch progressed. It was not alleged that there was anything unusual about the soil, which the
3. There was no error in dismissing the petition on general demurrer.
Judgment affirmed.