Court Opinion

ID: 5558678
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 00:46:06.642746+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:35:24.327011
License: Public Domain

Warner, Chief Justice.
This was an action brought by the plaintiff against the ordinaries of Murray and Whitfield counties, to recover damages sustained by the plaintiff in consequence of a defective bridge, which had been built by the aforesaid counties across the Conasauga river by letting out the same to the lowest bidder, without talcing a bond of the contractor to lceep said bridge in repair. On the trial of the case, the jury, under the charge of the court, found a verdict for the defendants. The court charged, amongst other things, “ that if the jury find that the injury complained of by plaintiff occurred more than seven years after the erection of the bridge, then the defendants are not liable,” whereupon the plaintiff excepted. It was admitted at the trial that the bridge was built by letting it out to A. P. Eoberts as the lowest bidder, and that no bond was taken, as required by the Code, to keep it in repair, and that it was completed about the 1st of January, 1867. The injury complained of occurred in September, 1874. If this was an original question in this court, I should hold that the counties were liable to be sued for the damages sustained as corporations, for the reasons expressed in my dissenting opinion in Scales vs. The Ordinary of Chattahoochee County, 41 Georgia Reports, 229. But, according to the ruling of the majority of the court in that case, the charge of the court was error in this case.
The 671st section of the Code declares that “when a public bridge, ferry, turnpike or causeway is let out, the contractor must, in his bond, make a condition also to keep it in good repair for at least seven years, and as many more years as the contract may be for.” The majority of the court held in the above, case, that if no bond was taken from the contractor as required, the county would be liable under the 691st section of the new Code. It does not appear for what length of time the contract was made by the contractor to keep the bridge in good repair; whether it was for seven or more years. The *834charge of the court assumes that there was evidence that the contractor was only bound by his contract to keep the bridge in good repair for seven years, whereas there was no evidence for what length of time he contracted to keep it in good repair, therefore the charge of the court was error for that reason. But if the contract liad been to keep the bridge in good repair for seven years the defendants failed to perform their duty, by requiring the contractor to give bond as required by law for its faithful performance, and shall they be allowed to take advantage of their own neglect of duty, enjoined upon' them by law, and be placed in the same condition and have the same protection after the expiration of seven years, as if they had performed their duty ? If the law makes them liable for damages for not keeping the bridge in repair for at least seven years when no bond and security has been taken of the contractor,as was held by the majority of the court in Scales vs. The Ordinary of Chattahoochee County, why should they not- be liable as well after the expiration of seven years as during that period \ The ground of the defendants liability is a continuing neglect of duty from the time of making the contract by the contractor up to the time of the injury. The defect in the bridge which caused the injury may have resulted from the defendants neglect of duty in not requiring bond and security of the contractor — who can tell ? Asa general rule, contractors do their work better when bond and security is required of them for the faithful performance of their contracts, especially bridge contractors who build bridges for the public. The defendants were in default in not performing their legal duty, and should not be allowed to take advantage of it to shield them from liability.
Let the judgment of the court below be reversed.