Counsel for the plaintiff argues that the trial judge, in sustaining the general demurrer to the petition,
apparently
assumed that the plaintiff’s cause of action was predicated upon the fellow-servant rule. The judge’s order sustaining the demurrer reads: “This case coming on for hearing before me on demurrer, after hearing argument the general demurrer of the defendant is sustained and the plaintiff’s petition is hereby dismissed for failure to state a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant. The special demurrers are not passed on.” We find no place where it is contended that the plaintiff’s son was a fellow servant of the operator of the hoist, an employee of the defendant. Therefore,
Standard Cotton Mills
v.
Collum,
6
Ga. App.
426 (
“3. In a suit against the owners and the tenant of a building to recover damages for injuries sustained by the plaintiff, a window' washer, in falling to the ground while washing from the outside a window of the fourth story, where it appears from the allegations of the petition that the plaintiff fell because, without testing or examining the strength of the window for that purpose, he voluntarily chose to support himself by holding to parts thereof which were insecure and inadequate for such use,
held,
the petition affirmatively shows such negligence or want of care on the part of the plaintiff as to be a bar to recovery.” In
James
v.
Smith,
92
Ga. App.
131 (
It seems to us that the danger incident to the use of the materials hoist as a means of getting to the upper floors of the building under construction was open and obvious. The petition describes in detail the lack of various safety devices which would have prevented a person from falling off the hoist. The petition described it as “dangerous,” “unsafe for the transportation of passengers” and unfit for anyone to ride on as a passenger because of the total absence of handrails, barriers, gates or other safeguards. No emergency existed requiring the plaintiff’s son to ride on the materials hoist. No one ordered him to ride on it. It is not alleged that the hoist was the only means of getting to the upper floors of the building. In the final analysis it is perfectly clear from the allegations of the petition that the plaintiff’s son, with full knowledge of the conditions and in broad day *456 light, voluntarily assumed the risk incident to riding on the materials hoist, and took the chance of being able to make the ride successfully.
The trial court did not err in sustaining the general demurrer to the petition.
Judgment affirmed.
