1. In an action against an ice company for injuries to an adult customer resulting when he stooped down and inserted his fingers into a chute down which traveled the waste ice from a machine that was cutting it into cubes, and which was known to be in operation by the plaintiff, the ice company is held not liable in the absence of evidence indicating that the cube-cutting machine was not adequately protected, or that protection was necessary.
2. The evidence objected to was properly excluded in accordance with the rulings in Georgia Southern Florida Railway Co. v. Cartledge, 116 Ga. 164 (42 S.E. 405, 59 L.R.A. 118), where certain former decisions were overruled.
1. Sanford sued Frigidice Company Inc. for damages for an injury to his fingers which he alleged was caused by the negligence of the defendant, in having and operating, a cube-cutting ice machine at its place of business. The evidence objected to was properly excluded in accordance with the rulings made in Georgia Southern Florida Railway Co. v. Cartledge, supra, this case having overruled several earlier cases decided by the same court. See also in this connection Louisville Nashville Railroad Co. v. Barnwell, 131 Ga. 791 (63 S.E. 501).
2. The injury for which a recovery was sought was not caused by a dangerous statical condition of the premises, and those cases cited by the plaintiff which related only to such conditions are not in point. The accident did not occur by the plaintiff's inadvertent slipping or falling against the machine, or any of its parts. On the contrary, the plaintiff deliberately and intentionally, according to his own testimony, inserted his hand and fingers into the chute from which the waste ice was descending. He did this by stooping down and running his hand up this chute to get the particles of ice, which seem to have been attractive to him on a hot day, and his fingers came into contact with some saws in the machine and were injured. We are unable to see on what principle the defendant could be held liable, for it had a right to have the cube-cutting ice machine on its platform where it delivered ice, and it had a right *Page 595 to use it in connection with the ice business conducted thereon. There was nothing to indicate that the machine was not adequately protected, or that any protection was necessary for the chute which was eliminating the waste particles of ice and into which the plaintiff inserted his hand and arm. Under such proof the plaintiff failed to establish a cause of action. Moreover, the evidence showed that the machine was a modern, ordinary, cube-cutting, ice machine, and one commonly used for cutting ice into cubes. Nor was there any proof that any usual or customary guards were omitted. The judge did not err in granting a nonsuit.
Judgment affirmed. Broyles, C. J., and Gardner, J., concur