Geele v. Bates

49 S.E.2d 85, 77 Ga. App. 396
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 12, 1948
Docket31892, 31893, 31894, 31895.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 S.E.2d 85 (Geele v. Bates) 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
Geele v. Bates, 49 S.E.2d 85, 77 Ga. App. 396 (Ga. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Gardner, J.

I. (1) Mrs. Lillian D. Bates brought her action for the recovery of damages for the negligent homicide of her son in the Winecoff Hotel fire. The petition was brought against Mrs. Annie Lee Irwin, W. H. Irwin, A. F. Geele, A. F. Geele Jr., R. E. O’Connell, and W. H. Irwin, Mrs. Annie Lee Irwin, A. F. Geele, A. F. Geele Jr., R. E. O’Connell, trading and doing business as Winecoff Hotel Company. The petition alleged that Mrs. Annie Lee Irwin was the owner of the Winecoff Hotel building. The other defendants were alleged to be the operators of the hotel.

Mrs. Mattie E. Davis brought her action for the recovery of damages for the negligent homicide of her daughter in the Winecoff Hotel fire against the same above-mentioned defendants.

The allegations of each case, except as to the party plaintiff, are in all material respects identical and are so treated by counsel for both parties in this court. The petitions alleged negligence per se in the violation of both State statutes and ordinances of the City of Atlanta. And the petition also alleged certain acts of negligence based on the common law. Demurrers both general and special were filed to the petitions as amended. A part of the general demurrers was sustained and other parts overruled. Likewise, certain of the special demurrers were overruled and others sustained. The defendants in the court below assign error here on the overruling of their demurrers; and the plaintiffs in the court below filed cross-bills of exceptions assigning error on the judgment of the trial court in sustaining certain of the general demurrers and special demurrers. Since the cases are identical, we shall deal with them together. What we say as to the one, applies to the other.

(2) As a result of the fire in the Winecoff Hotel on December 7, 1946, and *397 since that time different phases of litigation have appeared in this court as well as in the Supreme Court. There are now pending in the Supreme Court equitable petitions-as follows: Irwin et al. v. Torbert, and vice versa (cases Nos. 16096 and 16097); and Geele et al. v. Torbert et al., and vice versa (cases Nos. 16100 and 16101). In those cases there are additional parties defendant to the parties defendant in the instant cases. But the defendants here are named as defendants there and in the same relationship to the ownership of the hotel and the operators of it at the time of the fire. Of course the plaintiffs in the court below in each case are different. Except for the equitable phases alleged and embraced in the cases pending in the Supreme Court, the material allegations as to negligence per se and common-law negligence as contained in the petitions both in the Supreme Court and here, are materially the same, if not almost identical. The demurrers filed in the Supreme Court cases and in the cases here are materially the same. The assignments of error both in the direct bill of exceptions and in the cross-bill of exceptions are materially and substantially the same in the cases pending in the Supreme Court and in the instant cases except as to four assignment's of error which appear in the instant cases and which do not appear in the cases pending in the Supreme Court. We will deal with these four exceptions later on in this opinion.

On June 11, 1948, the Supreme Court rendered an opinion, elaborately and . in detail discussing and passing upon the issues presented for our determination in the instant cases except as to the four particulars above mentioned. We, are basing this opinion on the opinion of the Supreme Court rendered June 11, 1948, and the judgment on the cases on rehearing. The decision of the Supreme Court is binding on this court. Generally, the Supreme Court held that the allegations as to the acts of negligence per se based upon the State statutes and the ordinances of the City of Atlanta were good; and that also, the allegations as to acts of common-law negligence were good; and that insofar as the trial court overruled the demurrers as to negligence per se, it did not err. But that insofar as it sustained the demurrers as to the allegations of common-law negligence, it did err. Since, as we have said, the issues to be decided here are materially the same as those embraced in the cases pending in the Supreme Court, we will not go into detail here as to the issues involved in the instant cases, but merely refer to the decision of the Supreme Court rendered June 11, 1948. See Irwin et al. v. Torbert, supra, and Geele et al. v. Torbert, supra.

(3) (a) We will now revert to a discussion of the four exceptions mentioned which are embraced in the instant cases and which are not embraced in the Supreme Court cases mentioned hereinbefore. The petitions in the instant cases allege as an act of negligence per se the failure to have fire escapes on the outside of the Winecoff Hotel building, as provided in the Code, §§ 52-201, 52-205. The defendants demurred to the allegations of negligence under the provisions of these Code sections on the ground that the provisions of these Code sections were unconstitutional. The court sustained the demurrers in this regard. Error is assigned in the cross-bill of exceptions to the judgment of the trial court sustaining these demurrers. The court did not err in its *398 judgment sustaining these demurrers. Geele v. State, 202 Ga. 381 (43 S. E. 2d, 254, 172 A. L. R. 196).

(b) Paragraph 8 of the demurrer attacks paragraph 13 of the petition as amended. Paragraph 13 of the petition as amended reads as follows: “13. At the time of said fire, there was of force a valid ordinance of the City of Atlanta, hereto attached and marked Exhibit ‘D’ under which the said Wineeoff Hotel, by reason of the defective conditions herein-before described, was subject to condemnation, and these facts were known to the defendants, and all of them.” Paragraph 13 of the petition as amended has as an Exhibit a portion of the Code of the City of Atlanta, as follows: “Exhibit D: Section 318. Unsafe Buildings. 1. Notice to Make Safe. When it is reported to the Inspector of Buildings that any building or structure or part thereof is unsafe or dangerous, he shall immediately cause an examination of the property to be made. If this examination shows the building or structure or any portion thereof to be unsafe or dangerous, as to the construction, the occupancy or exits, the result thereof shall be entered upon a docket; the Inspector of Buildings shall at once serve notice, in the manner prescribed in Section 316, upon the owner or upon the person designated in Section 320. Such notice shall contain a description of the building or structure considered unsafe or dangerous, and shall require the same to be made safe and secure or removed, as may be considered necessary by the Inspector of Buildings, and it shall require the person served therewith to immediately certify in writing to the Inspector of Buildings his consent or refusal to secure, make safe or remove the building or structure or part thereof. If he immediately certifies in writing his consent to comply therewith he shall be allowed 24 hours following the service of such notice in which to -begin to secure, make safe or remove the building or structure. He shall employ sufficient labor and material, and immediately begin to secure, make safe or remove the same.

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.E.2d 85, 77 Ga. App. 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geele-v-bates-gactapp-1948.