114 Ga. App. 395 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1966
The law is now well settled in this State that where two people enter into an agreement to make a trip for their joint pleasure or benefit, where they share the expenses and take turns in driving the vehicle, the standard of care owed by the driver to the occupant, whether the occupant be the owner of the vehicle or whether he was in the first instance the person
According to this testimony, then, the collision would have been avoided if Frank Edwards had not speeded up immediately behind the Knowles automobile and prevented Jerry Edwards from returning to his right-hand side of the road when he realized that the way ahead of him was blocked by the oncoming Parrott car. There was nothing to prevent the defendant from seeing this situation and slowing down enough to let the Ford back into its proper lane of traffic. While the primary negligence was chargeable to the driver of the passing car, and while a driver who is himself not negligent is ordinarily not required to foresee that others may be, so as to avoid their negligence if it occurs, one who is himself violating traffic regulations has a duty to anticipate that others may do likewise. Williams v. Grier, 196 Ga. 327 (26 SE2d 698). Under the circumstances the jury might also have found that this defendant was following too closely, that this act prevented Jerry Edwards from returning to his own right side of the road, and that both of these acts concurred to cause the plaintiff’s injuries. The motion for judgment nothwithstanding the verdict was properly overruled.