27 Ga. App. 712 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1921
This is an action against a partnership for personal injuries sustained by an employee. Two questions are made on general demurrer. It is insisted (1) that partnerships are not responsible for torts committed by a partnership, under the Civil Code (1910), § 3187; and (2) that if there is such a liability, the allegations of the petition are not sufficient to set forth a cause of action.
Under the law of this State it is well settled that the master owes a duty to Ms servant of furnishing safe machinery and of keeping the machinery in safe condition, and that this is one of the absolute, non-delegable duties of the master, and that a failure to perform this duty is negligence which renders the mas
Chief Justice Bleckley, in Drucker v. Wellhouse, 82 Ga. 129 (8 S. E. 40, 2 L. R. A. 328), said: “ Though a firm pr partnership is not a person, it is a legal entity, and for some purposes is recognized as a quasi person having powers and functions exercisable by one of the partners severally or all of them jointly. . . The law does take note, on a wide scale, of partnership as a legal entity, and regards it as a unit both of rights and obligations. ” A partnership in the conduct of its business is a legal entity both as to its rights and in the performance of its duties to the public and to its employees, and is a legal entity as to its obligations. Partners are, in respect to the business in which they are engaged, agents of each other, and therefore one partner might be liable for the tortious acts of another done in ihe usual course of lousiness of the firm. But neither the members of a partnership nor the partnership itself is liable for the personal, individual tort of a member not done in the prosecution of the business of the firm but for his own individual and personal purpose. . If the master is a member of a partnership by which the servant is employed, and the work in which he so takes part is within the scope of the common undertaking of the partnership, his partners are jointly liable with him for an injury caused by his negligence to the servant. If the act of negligence which causes the injury to the servant is the act of the partnership itself as a
Judgment affirmed.