60 Ga. App. 48 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1939
Mrs. Elsie Tompkins brought her action for damages for personal injuries against Harold I. Gottlieb. General and special demurrers were filed to the petition. The judge sustained certain of the special demurrers, allowing the plaintiff ten days in which to amend. The plaintiff failed to amend her peti
The petition was substantially as follows: The defendant leases, operates, controls, and maintains a public swimming-pool, amusement, and recreation place known as Daffin Park Swimming-Pool in Savannah, Georgia. On a certain date the plaintiff paid the defendant the fee of five cents required by the defendant as a charge for a shower-bath, which all persons are required to take before entering the pool. The defendant operates said swimming-pool, etc., for personal gain, leasing the same from the City of Savannah, and charging all persons entering said swimming-pool for said shower-bath, and additionally renting bathing suits and use of bath-house compartments to those desiring to use the same. Persons. entering said swimming-pool may do so without renting a bathing suit or paying the bath-house fee, but are required to take said shower-bath as a prerequisite to entering said pool, and can not enter said swimming-pool without paying said fee for shower-bath. By the terms of the lease under which defendant operates said enterprise he is required “to keep the pool in a sanitary condition and in good repair,” and is further required to carry liability insurance upon said enterprise to hold the mayor and aldermen of the City of Savannah harmless for any and all injuries to persons arising out of the operation of said recreation center. On a date previous to May 22, 1938, the exact date being unknown to petitioner, the defendant placed in the pool a large metal drum similar to drums used for the storage of gasoline, which was partly submerged in the water of the pool. Said drum was unanchored, and was permitted to float from one part of the pool to another, with no definite location. The drum had a sharp and dangerous metal edge, which was unknown to petitioner and could not be seen because the same was submerged in the water. This condition of the drum was known to the defendant, who failed to remedy this dangerous condition, or to remove the drum from the pool, or to warn bathers or the petitioner of the dangerous condition of said drum with its razor-like edge and of the d'anger of coming into its close proximity. About 4:30 p. m. on May 22, 1938, the petitioner, after swimming for some time, dived into the pool, and on coming to the surface struck her left kneecap against said drum, which severely cut her kneecap. She was free from fault, and did not
The defendant demurred specially and generally to the petition; ■the ground's of special demurrer being as follows: The plaintiff should allege “how and in what manner the defendant leases, operates, controls, and maintains a public swimming-pool; that is, 'should show from whom the said swimming-pool is leased, upon what terms and conditions said swimming-pool is leased and operated-, by the- defendant.” The petition does not show when and to
1. "Copies of contracts, obligations to pay, or other writings should be incorporated in or attached to the petition in all cases in which they constitute the cause of action, or the relief prayed for must be based thereon.” Code, § 81-105. It is only necessary to set out such writings in the petition, or to attach a copy thereof as exhibits, if they constitute the cause of action sued upon or the basis of the relief prayed. Steele v. Graves, 160 Ga. 120 (3) (127 S. E. 465); Moon Motor-Car Co. v. Savannah Motor-Car Co., 41 Ga. App. 231, 237 (2) (152 S. E. 611).
2. It is not incumbent upon a plaintiff, when he elects to bring an action ex delicto against a lessee of a swimming-pool for personal injuries received as a result of the lessee placing and maintaining a metal drum in said swimming pool in a dangerous condition, to wit, with a razor-like edge, to set forth in detail, by way of an exhibit attached to his petition or otherwise, the precise terms of the lease contract between the defendant lessee and his lessor, which is mentioned in his petition merely for the purpose of showing the relationship of the parties, and that the defendant was in control of and operated the said swimming-pool for personal gain and profit, it appearing from the petition that none of the alleged acts of negligence was in failing to keep the pool in a sanitary
3. The gist of the action in the instant case is negligence in the maintaining of the metal drum in the swimming-pool with a razor-like edge thereon; and although the petition alleged that the defendant “leases, operates, controls, and maintains” the swimming-pool, and alleges the ultimate fact (Lewis v. Amorous, 3 Ga. App. 50, 53, 59 S. E. 338) that he operated the same for personal gain and profit under a lease from the City of Savannah, such contract of lease does not constitute the cause of action, and it is unnecessary to attach to the petition a copy of the lease to which the plaintiff was not a party. The petition set forth with legal sufficiency the acts of negligence complained of.
4. The judge erred in sustaining the demurrer on the ground that a copy of the lease was not attached to the petition, or all of its terms otherwise precisely set forth therein.
Judgment reversed.