Elrod v. King

123 S.E.2d 441, 105 Ga. App. 46, 1961 Ga. App. LEXIS 563
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedDecember 5, 1961
Docket39134
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 123 S.E.2d 441 (Elrod v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elrod v. King, 123 S.E.2d 441, 105 Ga. App. 46, 1961 Ga. App. LEXIS 563 (Ga. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

Bell, Judge.

In the amended petition it was charged, “The defendant Mechanical Service Company had actual knowledge after installation that the blower control system was not functioning in a usual and proper manner, and in spite of such knowledge it failed and neglected to- either correct said malfunction or to warn the plaintiff of the danger thereof.” (Emphasis added.)

The defendants York Corporation and Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Co. contend that, construing the petition against the pleader on general demurrer, it clearly appears that the direct and proximate cause of the damage to the house was the intervening act of a separate agency.

While generally the failure of a retailer or other person to inspect or discover a latent defect is not such an intervening cause as will break the chain of causation, the rule in Georgia is that where a latent defect is charged in a manufactured item but the defect is discovered later by one under a duty to repair the defect or give warning of it, this discovery will insulate the manufacturer from any damages resulting' from its manufacture of a latently defective machine. Harley v. General Motors Corp., 97 Ga. App. 348 (1) (103 SE2d 191).

Construing the petition most strongly against the pleader, as we must on general demurrer, it appears clear that the latent defects in the manufacture and assembly of the respective components, as charged against each of the defendant manufacturers, were discovered by the third defendant who installed it. *50 Under the authority of the Harley case this discovery insulated each of the manufacturers from any damages resulting from the latently defective mechanisms, and the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s damages was the alleged negligence of the installer in failing to give warning to the plaintiff or to correct the deficiencies.

It follows that the trial court properly sustained the general demurrers of the defendants York Corporation and theMinneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Co.

This ruling renders it unnecessary to consider the various assignments of error on the sustaining of special demurrers of these two defendants.

We next consider the assignments of error which object to the trial court’s order sustaining special demurrers 5 and 6 of the defendant King.

Special demurrer 5 moved to strike the allegations of the petition which stated that the fire “had its beginning in a malfunction and defect in the blower control system,” on the ground that this was a conclusion of the pleader without any facts being alleged in the paragraph or elsewhere in the complaint upon which to base the charge, it not being alleged how or in what manner the defect occurred or what the alleged malfunction was, and the specific malfunction urged not being specified with any particularity. Special demurrer 6 on similar grounds objected to language in the petition charging that the blower system ceased to work “as a direct result of said malfunction in the blower control system” causing the furnace to overheat.

This defendant (King) is charged with installing a furnace with a defective blower control, a defective control mechanism, a defective regulator, and a defective safety switch. While these defects are not otherwise identified or described, other portions of the petition set forth the results which these alleged defects produced.

The sustaining of these demurrers raises the question as to the degree of definiteness with which a plaintiff must plead the deficiencies in a mechanical contrivance allegedly defective, which malfunctioned and set in motion a chain of events which *51 caused damage to the plaintiff’s property. Confronted with similar problems, numerous cases have reiterated that the question is to be resolved by the application of the rule of “reasonable definiteness and certainty.”

In Womack v. Central Ga. Gas. Co., 85 Ga. App. 799 (70 SE2d 398), the action.was brought for the damage caused to the plaintiff’s building as a result of a gas explosion. Exceptions were taken to a judgment overruling special demurrers to the original petition as to the allegations of negligence on the ground that the plaintiff did not specify with sufficient certainty how the heating equipment and pipes were defective, how the gas escaped, which heater it escaped from, and in what way the action of the defendant in supplying gas to the premises resulted in the explosion. In holding that these special demurrers were properly overruled as the facts were alleged with reasonable definiteness and certainty, the court stated that, “. . . it was impossible for the plaintiff or any other person to know with precise accuracy at what exact spot in the installation the leak occurred. The plaintiff was not an expert in these matters, and he alleged that the defendant’s agents, who were experts, had spent the previous day on the premises searching for the leak and had been unable to find it. He further alleged that there was an escape of gas from the defendant’s installations. Reasonable definiteness and certainty are all that is required . . .” P. 806. And see Charleston & Western Carolina Ry. Co. v. Attaway, 7 Ga. App. 231 (2a) (66 SE 548); Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Davis, 5 Ga. App. 214 (1), 217 (62 SE 1022); Hubbard v. Macon Ry. & Light Co., 5 Ga. App. 223 (62 SE 1018); Green v. Babcock Bros. Lumber Co., 130 Ga. 469 (4) (60 SE 1062); and Georgia Ry. & Elec. Co. v. Reeves, 123 Ga. 697, 702 (51 SE 610).

In obedience to the cited precedents, and considering the complex nature of the control machinery in or connected to a gas furnace, we think the allegations describing the results which an allegedly defective furnace and its controls produced were pleaded with reasonable definiteness and certainty as against special demurrer.

The trial judge erred in sustaining special demurrers 5 and 6 of the defendant King."

*52 The defendant King’s special demurrers 12 and 13 attacked, respectively, allegations of the petition that this defendant was negligent in using insulation material having an inflammable nature, and negligent in failing to use non-inflammable insulation material in connection with the installation of the furnace. The demurrers urge that these allegations are mere conclusions of the pleader in that it was not alleged that the defendant was under any contractual obligation or legal duty to the plaintiff to use any type of insulating material other than that actually used.

This court has stated that: “Over and beyond the obligation in contracts, it is fundamental that every person owes a duty to exercise ordinary care not to supply by sale, lease, etc., a thing, instrumentality, or building which is so defectively constructed or conditioned as to be imminently dangerous to the person to whom supplied . . .” Kuhr Bros. v. Spahos, 89 Ga. App. 885, 888 (81 SE2d 491).

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.E.2d 441, 105 Ga. App. 46, 1961 Ga. App. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elrod-v-king-gactapp-1961.