From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Colonial Stores, Inc. v. Brewster

Court of Appeals of Georgia
Jan 27, 1954
80 S.E.2d 81 (Ga. Ct. App. 1954)

Opinion

34927.

DECIDED JANUARY 27, 1954.

Action for damages. Before Judge Flournoy. Polk City Court. September 18, 1953.

W. W. Mundy, Jr., Boykin Boykin, for plaintiffs in error.

Stewart York, Dan Winn, contra.


1. The amended petition alleges that the plaintiff was an invitee and not a mere licensee as to the portion of the premises in which she was injured, and the court did not err in overruling the general demurrer thereto.

2. The paragraph of the amended petition against which the special demurrer was directed alleges ultimate facts and not conclusions of the pleader; therefore the court did not err in overruling the special demurrer.


DECIDED JANUARY 27, 1954.


Mrs. Blanche Brewster sued Colonial Stores, Incorporated, and City Supply Company for damages allegedly due to the defendants' negligence. The amended petition alleged in substance: that the joint and concurrent negligent acts of the defendants combined to proximately cause the damage to the plaintiff as hereinafter set out; that on July 29, 1952, at about 1:15 p. m., the plaintiff entered the store of the defendant Colonial Stores, Inc., in Cedartown, Georgia, as an invitee for the purpose of buying groceries from said defendant, she being a regular customer of that defendant; that the plaintiff had been buying groceries from Colonial Stores for several years and was well acquainted with Charles Orr, the store manager; that on numerous occasions Mr. Orr had told the plaintiff that she could use the telephone to call a taxicab to pick up her and her groceries, as the store permitted its customers to use the telephone as a part of its services; that, after buying her groceries on said date, the plaintiff went to use the telephone, which was in the back portion of the store, the telephone being located behind the door just inside the storeroom of the store, as she had done on many other occasions; that against the wall near the telephone there were stacked cases of canned goods of the defendant Colonial Stores, Inc.; that in the storeroom there was an electrically operated conveyor belt belonging to Colonial Stores, which was used for conveying goods and articles to and from the upstairs portion of the storeroom; that the lower end of the conveyor was only a few feet away from the telephone, and the conveyor belt extended at about a thirty to forty-degree angle to the upstairs portion of the storeroom in a direction away from the telephone; that, at the time the plaintiff was using the telephone, Dean Vinson, an employee, agent, and servant of the defendant Colonial Stores, and James Weathington, an employee, agent, and servant of the defendant City Supply Company, were operating the conveyor in conveying empty soft-drink bottles belonging to City Supply Company; that at the time both employees were acting within the scope of their employment of their respective employers; that Dean Vinson was at the upstairs end of the conveyor and had placed some cartons and crates of soft-drink bottles on the conveyor to be conveyed to the lower end of the conveyor at the main floor level of the storeroom, where James Weathington was operating the mechanism which controlled the operation of the conveyor; that, as the cartons and crates reached the lower end of the conveyor, James Weathington attempted to stop the conveyor but, because of his inexperience in operating the conveyor, negligently failed to stop it properly, and the crates continued on over the end of the conveyor, throwing Weathington into and against the door adjacent to the telephone and causing the door to throw the plaintiff against the cases of canned goods hereinbefore described and to pin the plaintiff with her back against said cases, whereby she received certain enumerated injuries; that at the time both employees knew the plaintiff was using the telephone and knew that she was in a place of danger while the conveyor was being operated; that the defendants and their employees were negligent in enumerated particulars.

The defendants' renewed general demurrers and certain of their special demurrers to the amended petition were overruled, and they except.


The plaintiffs in error contend that the amended petition shows that the plaintiff was a mere licensee as to the storeroom portion of the store premises, and that no breach of duty owed by the defendants to the plaintiff as a licensee is shown. Conceding that a person may be an invitee as to certain portions of premises and a licensee or trespasser as to other portions ( Piggly Wiggly v. Kelsey, 83 Ga. App. 526, 64 S.E.2d 201), we think that the amended petition shows that the plaintiff was an invitee as to the storeroom portion of the store premises. The amended petition alleges that the plaintiff entered into the main portion of the store premises for the purpose of buying groceries, and thus alleges that she was an invitee as to that portion of the premises. The amended petition further alleges that on numerous occasions the store manager had told the plaintiff that she could use the telephone to call a taxicab to pick up her and her groceries, as the store permitted its customers to use the telephone as a part of its services. If the store permitted its customers to use the storeroom portion of the premises for the purpose of using the telephone as a part of its services, we cannot say as a matter of law that the plaintiff's use of the telephone was for her sole benefit, and that she was not an invitee as to that portion of the premises. Coffer v. Bradshaw, 46 Ga. App. 143, 149 (7) ( 167 S.E. 119); Smith v. Jewell Cotton Mill Co., 29 Ga. App. 461 (2) ( 116 S.E. 17). The case of Piggly Wiggly v. Kelsey, supra, is distinguishable from the instant case, as evidenced by the following excerpt from the opinion in that case (p. 530): "The plaintiff alleges facts to establish himself as an invitee to the store portion of the defendant's premises, and bases his right of recovery on the theory of being an invitee; but he fails to allege that the initial invitation expressly extended to the use of the elevator, which was not located in the store portion of the premises, or that such use was an essential part of his initial invitation, or that he customarily used the elevator for the purpose of moving the sawdust from one floor to another, with the knowledge of the defendant, when he sold and delivered sawdust to the defendant. Nor does the plaintiff allege that an agent of the defendant authorized to extend an invitation to use the elevator and the premises adjacent thereto saw him place the first sack of sawdust on the elevator and allowed him to so use the elevator without objecting thereto, so as to allege an implied invitation to use the elevator. In the absence of an allegation of at least one of the above propositions, . . . the petition did not state a cause of action against the defendant."

2. The defendants specially demurred to the following paragraph of the amended petition: "Petitioner shows that she had been buying groceries from Colonial Stores for several years and was well acquainted with Mr. Charles Orr, the manager of the store. On numerous occasions Mr. Orr had told petitioner that she could use the telephone to call a taxicab to pick up her and her groceries as the store permitted its customers to use the telephone as a part of its services. After buying her groceries petitioner went to use said telephone which was in the back portion of said store, being behind the door just inside the storeroom of said store, as she had done on many other occasions." The grounds of the demurrer were that the allegations were lacking in certainty, were too vague and indefinite, and that the allegation, "`as the store permitted its customers to use the telephone as a part of its services' appears to be a left handed method of attempting to allege a custom, without doing so," and was a mere conclusion of the pleader. The defendants contend that, had the court sustained the special demurrer, the petition should have been dismissed on general demurrer, as, applying the principle stated in Southern Grocery Stores v. Childs, 174 Ga. 888 (2) ( 164 S.E. 766), it would have been necessary to construe the petition on general demurrer as if that paragraph were not alleged therein. We agree with the plaintiffs in error that if this paragraph of the amended petition had been subject to the special demurrer urged, the petition would have failed to allege that the plaintiff was an invitee as to the storeroom portion of the premises and would have been subject to a general demurrer. However, we do not agree that the paragraph was subject to the special demurrer. The allegations in the paragraph were not conclusions, but were allegations of ultimate facts, and it was not necessary for the plaintiff to allege the evidence by which the allegations would be proved. Atlantic Co. v. Taylor, 80 Ga. App. 25, 30 (1) ( 54 S.E.2d 910).

The court did not err in overruling either the special or the general demurrer.

Judgments affirmed. Quillian and Nichols, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

Colonial Stores, Inc. v. Brewster

Court of Appeals of Georgia
Jan 27, 1954
80 S.E.2d 81 (Ga. Ct. App. 1954)
Case details for

Colonial Stores, Inc. v. Brewster

Case Details

Full title:COLONIAL STORES, INCORPORATED, et al. v. BREWSTER

Court:Court of Appeals of Georgia

Date published: Jan 27, 1954

Citations

80 S.E.2d 81 (Ga. Ct. App. 1954)
80 S.E.2d 81

Citing Cases

Cooper v. Anderson

Code § 105-401 provides: "Where the owner or occupier of land, by express or implied invitation, induces or…

Olateru-Olagbegbi v. Branch Banking Trust Co.

Regardless, plaintiff argues that his negligence claim is not related to defendants' handling of the…