53 Ga. App. 795 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1936
In a somewhat analogous case it was held, that, in the absence of a statute or a contract requiring a water company to furnish a supply of water to individual residents, “the great weight of authority is to the effect that a resident of a city can not recover of a waterworks company damages for loss by fire occasioned by. the failure of such company to furnish, in accordance with the contract with the city, a sufficient supply of water to extinguish the fire.” Holloway v. Macon Gas-Light & Water Co., 133 Ga. 387, 394 (64 S. E. 330). In Martha Mills v. Moseley, 50 Ga. App. 536 (179 S. E. 159), it was said: “There being no privity of contract between the resident and the company, and no public duty on the part of the company as to the resident, he has no right of action either on the express contract of the city or in tort. Nor can he recover either ex contractu or ex delicto upon the theory that an implied contract and duty by the company to the resident arises in favor of the resident from the express con
Judgment affirmed.