55 Ga. App. 362 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1937
1. In this suit by a minor guest in an automobile, for $2000 damages on account of personal injuries received in a collision at intersecting city streets with an automobile driven by a servant of the defendants, the verdict of $300 for the plaintiff was fully authorized.
2. An automobile guest is precluded from recovery against the driver or master of the driver of another automobile, for damages from a collision, where the driver of the car in which the guest was riding failed to exercise ordinary care, and that negligence-was the sole proximate cause of the injury. But if the guest himself exercised ordinary care, he is not precluded from a recovery by the fact that both his host and the driver of the other automobile were negligent; provided that the negligence of the other driver was either the sole proximate cause, or one. of the causes, contributing to or joining with the negligence of the host to constitute together the proximate cause of the injury. A charge to the jury that authorizes a recovery against the operator of the other automobile merely if he was negligent, without regard to the question of proximate cause, is reversible error; but a charge that recognizes as a basis of liability the well-settled principle of concurrent negligence by both the operator and the host, each contributing to and together forming the proximate cause, is proper. Chandler v. Brittain, 48 Ga. App. 361 (3) (172 S. E. 745), and cit.; Seaboard Air-Line Ry. v. Barrow, 18 Ga. App. 261 (5) (89 S. E. 383); Espy v. Ash, 42 Ga. App. 487 (2) (156 S. E. 474); Ga. Ry. & Power Co. v. Bryans, 35 Ga. App. 713 (134 S. E. 787). Accordingly, there was no error or substantial inaccuracy calculated to mislead the jury in the following charge: “If the plaintiff’s injuries were caused solely by the negligence of . . the driver of the automobile in which she was riding, without any
3. Exception is taken to the admission in evidence of a traffic ordinance of the city where the collision occurred, declaring that vehicles on the right of another vehicle should have the right of way at street intersections, on the ground that the certificate attached to the evidence was dated October 39, 1934, and there was no presumption that the ordinance remained in effect on the date of the injury, August 33, 1935. The Code, § 68-303 (g) declares : “An operator of a vehicle shall have the right of way over the operator of another vehicle who is approaching from the left in an intersecting highway, but shall give the right of way to an operator of a vehicle approaching from the right on an intersecting highway.” Under the general rule that a condition once proved to exist will be presumed to have continued unless the contrary is proved, the ordinance was admissible, although the certificate as to its existence was dated about eleven months before the injury. The defendants offered no testimony to disprove such existence at the time of the injury, although they were put on notice by the petition that the plaintiff relied on the ordinance. Moreover, the State law as to the right of way at intersecting highways is substantially identical with the ordinance; and the plaintiff having in her petition relied on the statute as well as on the ordinance, and the judge having charged the law of negligence per se as to both, the defendants would not have been benefited by the exclusion from evidence of the ordinance.
4. “A palpable slip of the tongue on the part of the judge, in instructing the jury as to an abstract proposition of law, is not sufficient cause for reversing the judgment, where, upon consideration of it in connection with the context and all the rest of the
The court properly refused a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.