Rebecca Barnwell brought a suit in damages for personal injuries against Samuel J. Solomon and J. O’Brien. Her petition alleged that Solomon had parked an automobile truck in Broughton Lane, in the City of Savannah, in violation of certain designated ordinances of the city, and that the truck was parked in such a manner that O’Brien, while driving his truck on said lane, was forced to drive between Solomon’s parked truck and the porch of a house’ fronting on the lane, and that while so driving he (O’Brien) ran the truck against the porch on which the plaintiff was sitting, thereby causing the injuries sued for. The specific allegations of the negligence of Solomon were to the effect that his truck was parked in the lane in violation of certain ordinances of the city, and that there was not sufficient room between the truck and the porch for other vehicles to safely pass. The specific allegations of O’Brien’s negligence were to the effect that he negligently and carelessly attempted to pass between Solomon’s parked truck and the porch, without ascertaining that there was sufficient room to do so in safety, and that he was negligent in failing to stop his truck before it struck the porch on which the plaintiff was sitting. Solomon demurred to the petition on the ground that his alleged negligence was not the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries, said negligence being too remote to be the basis of an action against him, and that the petition “shows that a new cause of action intervened in the alleged negligence” of O’Brien, which negligence was not the natural and probable result of his (Solomon’s) alleged negligence, but was of itself sufficient to cause the plaintiff’s injuries. The court sustained the demurrer and dismissed the suit as to Solomon, and the plaintiff excepted to that judgment.
In our opinion this case is controlled by the decision in Cain v. Ga. Power Co., 53 Ga. App. 483 (
Judgment affirmed.
