Parnick Everett, a minor, through his father as next friend, filed his suit to recover damages for personal injuries against Mary G. Clegg. The father also filed suit to recover damages for loss of his son’s services, etc. The action grew out of a collision between the motorcycle operated by the son and an automobile operated by the defendant at a street intersection in the City of Rome. In both suits, it was charged that the proximate cause of the collision was due to several specific acts of negligence on the part of the defendant. The defendant, in her answer to the son’s suit and in her answer and countersuit to the father’s suit, asserted that the sole and proximate cause of the collision was due to the negligence of the son in operating the motorcycle. The two suits were tried together and resulted in a verdict for the defendant in both cases. The motion for a new trial filed in the son’s case was denied, and this judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeals.
Everett
v.
Clegg,
94
Ga. App.
725 (
1. In his motion for a new trial, the petitioner assigned error on this charge of the court to the jury: “If you should find that Mr. Everett’s son was in peril by negligence on the part of the defendant, Miss Clegg, and that he had two ways of conduct open, one safe and the other obviously dangerous, it was his duty to adopt that course which was safe. If he failed to adopt the safe course and was injured by adopting the obviously dangerous course, he cannot recover in this action.” In approving this charge, the Court of Appeals in its opinion said that, from the evidence, “the jury would have been authorized to find that he created an emergency and of the two courses open to him, chose the perilous rather than the safe course, and the trial court did not err in charging upon these two issues.” P. 731.
This instruction stated an incorrect principle of law. The charge placed an absolute duty upon the petitioner to select the safe course or else be barred from a recovery, when placed in a position of peril by the negligence of the defendant, without regard as to whether the petitioner was, at the time and in the-light of the surrounding circumstances as they appeared to him, acting as an ordinarily prudent person. When a driver of a motor vehicle is confronted with a sudden emergency caused by the negligence of another, he is not to be barred from a recovery because he exercised bad judgment under the circumstances, but in such emergency is only charged with the duty of exercising ordinary care and diligence under the circumstances.
Pickering
v.
Wagnon,
91
Ga. App.
610, 613 (
In
White
v.
Knapp,
31
Ga. App.
344 (6) (
The statement in the opinion in
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co.
v.
O’Neill,
127
Ga.
685, 690 (
2. The ruling of the Court of Appeals that the trial court did not err in charging the jury on the defendant’s duties, stating: “Mischief, which could by no reasonable person have been anticipated, cannot be taken into account as a basis upon which to predicate a wrong,” was not erroneous. The use of the word “mischief” was harmless, this word being synonymous with the word “injury”.
3. The Court of Appeals held that the following charge of the court: “The plaintiff is entitled to recover if he proves to your *171 satisfaction under the rules of law given you in charge that the defendant was negligent as alleged in his petition, and that he was injured and damaged as a proximate result thereof” [italics supplied], was not error, over the contention that it led the jury to believe that, before the plaintiff could recover, he must prove that the defendant was negligent in each of the several ways alleged in the petition. It was held that this charge did nc^t violate the rule that, although the plaintiff may allege several acts of negligence, proof of all such acts is not required, and a recovery will be sustained upon proof of any one or more of such acts.
This charge was erroneous and injurious to the plaintiff for the reason that, in effect, the jury were told that the burden was upon the plaintiff to prove
all
of the allegations of negligence in his petition before they would be authorized to return a verdict in his favor. See
Harrison
v.
League,
93
Ga. App.
718, 720 (
4. Error is assigned on the ruling of the Court of Appeals that the trial court did not err in charging the jury upon the law relating to accident. It is contended that the theory of accident was not raised by the pleadings or the evidence.
Where the evidence plainly shows that the injuries of the plaintiff were due either exclusively to his own negligence, or solely to the negligence of the defendant, or to the negligence of both the plaintiff and the defendant, it is error for the court to charge the law of accident.
Morrow
v.
Southeastern Stages,
68
Ga. App.
142 (1) (
*172 5. The remaining assignment of error relates to the act of the bailiff, during the time the jury were deliberating upon a verdict, in furnishing the jury at their request a booklet containing the traffic rules and regulations of the City of Rome. In view of the rulings above made, which will necessitate the granting of a new trial, and the fact that the matter complained of will not likely occur on another trial, it is unnecessary to pass upon this ruling of the Court of Appeals.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals, affirming the judgment of the trial court denying the motion for a new trial, was erroneous and must be reversed.
Judgment reversed.
