The issues in the two appeals are identical. The allegations of each petition essential to- our decision are in substance the same. In this opinion, therefore, all the discussion will relate to> both petitions and both plaintiffs.
Essentially the allegations of the petition are: The car in which plaintiff was a passenger and the truck driven by the defendant Murph (in the business of the defendant G. & R. Waterproofing Co., Inc.) were approaching an intersection in opposite directions; as the car in which plaintiff was riding approached the intersection, defendant negligently drove his truck to the left and across the centerline of the highway and brought *113 it to a stop in the traffic lane along which was traveling the car driven by defendant Brown, in which petitioner was riding. When defendant Murph drove the truck into this traffic lane defendant Brown did not have her car under control and did not immediately apply her brakes, swerved and ran off the road to avoid striking the stopped truck, and then in attempting to swerve back into the highway lost control of her car. Defendant Brown was negligent, in not having her car under control and in failing to reduce her speed as she approached the intersection and the truck and as the defendant Murph started turning and turned the truck, in failing to apply her brakes and stop, etc. Defendant Murph was negligent in driving his truck across the centerline and into the path of the Brown car, and in failing to give a signal for a left turn into, and stop in, the northbound traffic lane.
Plaintiffs in error rely heavily on cases dealing with static negligence and alternative pleading. Because of the striking differences in the cases cited by plaintiffs in error, both as to their facts and the appropriateness of these theories to them, they are not applicable or controlling in the case sub judice.
In the allegations of the present petition we can see no alternative or ambiguous pleading, or indication that the alleged negligence of the defendant Murph had become static. The natural meaning is that the alleged negligent acts and omissions of both defendants Brown and Murphy occurred in continuous sequence and were naturally and probably connected with each other. The allegations certainly present issues as to whether defendant Murph’s alleged acts of negligence set in motion defendant Brown’s alleged negligence which followed them; whether without defendant Murph’s negligence defendant Brown’s subsequent negligence would have occurred at all; whether defendant Murph should have foreseen consequences of his alleged negligence such as what allegedly happened; whether defendant Brown’s negligence was a concurrent cause or an independent intervening cause of the plaintiff’s injuries, or whether the accident would have happened without the cooperation of the two alleged causes.
These issues must be determined by a jury rather than as mat
*114
ters of law.
McGinnis v. Shaw,
Plaintiff in error argues that the petition shows that the truck did not block defendant Brown’s lane of travel when it was stopped, because the original petition, before it was amended, had alleged that defendant Murph brought the truck to a stop completely blocking the northbound traffic lane.
The only question before this court is what the amended petition shows on its face. It alleges that defendant Murph drove his truck to the left and across the centerline of the highway and brought it to a stop in defendant Brown’s traffic lane, and that defendant Brown swerved to avoid striking the stopped truck. The amended petition does not show what the plaintiff in error contends it does.
We turn now to the cases cited by the plaintiffs in error. In
Richards & Associates, Inc. v. Studstill,
Fair v. Huddle, Inc.,
Central of Ga. R. Co. v. Shepard,
We are not here dealing with a situation where the injured plaintiff is the driver, or a situation where the negligence of the driver is imputable to an injured passenger. In
Atlantic C. L. R. Co. v. Coxwell,
The petition alleged a cause of action against the defendants Murph and G. & R. Waterproofing Co., Inc.
Atlantic C. L. R. Co. v. Coxwell,
supra;
Williams v. Grier,
Therefore, the court did not err in overruling the general demurrer.
Judgment affirmed.
