57 S.E.2d 18 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1949
1. The words, "joint trespassers," in the constitutional provision that suits against joint trespassers residing in different counties may be tried in either county, has reference to all joint tort-feasors. Cox v. Strickland,
2. (a) Where certain conduct is alleged to be negligent, it is a jury question whether such conduct constitutes negligence if reasonable minds *619 might differ upon the question. If the sole conclusion to be reached is that such acts do not amount to negligence, the court must so hold as a matter of law.
(b) Where the allegations, if supported by evidence, would authorize a jury to determine that negligence exists, then, in determining whether the same constitutes the proximate or concurrent proximate cause of the injury, no general rule can be laid down, but here, too, it is a jury question if reasonable minds might differ thereon. If the sole conclusion to be reached is that such acts are not the proximate or concurrent proximate cause of the injury, the court must so hold as a matter of law.
(c) As to third parties in suits against joint defendants, the act of one defendant is a concurrent proximate cause of the injury if, but for that act, the injury might reasonably be expected not to have occurred, and the commission by the codefendant of acts of gross negligence would not necessarily and as a matter of law constitute the sole proximate cause of the injuries.
3. (a) An allegation as to the knowledge of the defendant of a certain state of facts is not demurrable as a conclusion.
(b) One who himself violates a statute cannot rely upon the presumption that others in like position will not disobey the law, and special demurrers attacking allegations of negligence in failing to anticipate the negligence of others under such circumstances are without merit.
(c) The remaining grounds of special demurrer are also without merit.
The acts of negligence alleged against the defendant, Georgia Power Company, are as follows: (a) That its driver brought his bus to a sudden and violent stop at said time and place; (b) that he failed to place said bus so that it would be at least eight feet removed from the center line of said highway, in violation of law; (c) that he failed to place said bus with its right side as near the right-hand side of said highway as practicable, in violation of law; (d) failed to extend his hand and arm horizontally from and beyond the left side of said bus, in violation of law; (e) failed to anticipate that Mrs. Waters would violate traffic regulations while he himself was violating the law; and (f) failed to move the bus forward to avoid the collision, "although he was either actually aware or could by the slightest degree of care make himself aware of her misconduct as alleged by the use of one of the three large mirrors described herein."
The defendant bus company filed a plea to the jurisdiction, and general and special demurrers. From the judgments of the trial court overruling the same it brings error.
1. The defendant filed its plea to the jurisdiction alleging that the venue of this suit should be in Bibb County where the collision occurred, under Code § 94-1101, providing that all actions for damages against electric companies must be brought in the county in which the cause of action originated, and that "any judgment rendered in any county other than the one herein designated shall be utterly void." In an action for damages against a railroad company and an employee thereof, brought in the county of residence of the latter, for an assault committed by an employee, it was held in Central of Georgia Ry. Co. v. Brown,
It is contended, however, that the only acts of negligence alleged against the defendant are the negligent failure to exercise due care in certain particulars, and that none of these acts of nonfeasance amounts to a trespass against the plaintiff. That one who parks an automobile which becomes involved in a collision is not guilty of a trespass, has frequently been held in Texas, and the defendant relies strongly on this line of decisions. Examination thereof, however, indicates that the cases cited arose under Tex. Rev. St. § 1995 (9), fixing venue in the common-law action of trespass, and did not involve cases of joint defendants, which are covered by Tex. Rev. St. § 1995 (4), allowing suits in such cases to be brought in the county of residence of either defendant. This latter principle, thus established by statute in Texas, has in Georgia been similarly established by judicial decision. In Cox v. Strickland,
The grant of a motion to strike the plea to the jurisdiction was therefore without error.
2. The defendant, Georgia Power Company, filed general demurrers on the grounds: (1) the petition set out no cause of action as to it; (2) the negligence of Mrs. Waters was the proximate and sole proximate cause of the injury; and (3) Mrs. Waters could, in the exercise of ordinary care, have avoided the injury.
We eliminate from this discussion all cases not involving guests charging concurring negligence against joint defendants, and also all cases where the acts of negligence charged were not sufficient to constitute negligence per se or common-law negligence, as well as all cases involving directed verdicts where the proof fell short of the negligence as alleged in the petition. From those remaining, we now list a number in support of the defendant's contention that the general demurrers should have been sustained. In Davis v. Tanner,
In Brinson v. Davis,
On the other hand, the following are among the decisions holding that, where injuries are alleged to have resulted from the concurring negligence of a host car, guilty of lack of slight care, and a third party, guilty of lack of ordinary care through violation of a statute or otherwise, the question of negligence should be for the jury to decide. In Eidson v. Felder,
Two other cases should be noted: Pullen v. Georgia Stages,
Turning now to other jurisdictions, the general rule is that questions as to proximate cause, in cases where it is alleged that the wrongful act of stopping on a highway is a concurrent proximate cause of injury, are peculiarly matters for the jury when a third party guest is the injured plaintiff. See 131 A.L.R., Ann., p. 605. The concurring negligence of the host is no defense to the codefendant in such cases. White v. Carolina Realty Co.,
It is apparent from all these authorities that, although each case must be decided upon its own facts, and in such circumstances it is unlikely that any two sets of facts will be identical, nevertheless, the widely divergent precedents here cited must result in some confusion. After full consideration, this court is of the opinion that, in all cases where the minds of reasonable persons may disagree as to whether an act alleged to be negligent is in fact negligence, as well as in all cases where reasonable minds may disagree as to whether the negligence alleged concurred with the negligent acts of third persons as a proximate cause, these questions should go to a jury for decision. "The mere fact that the injury would not have been sustained had only one of the acts of negligence occurred will not of itself operate to define and limit the other act as constituting the proximate cause, for if both acts . . contributed directly and concurrently in bringing about the injury, they together will constitute the proximate cause."Eidson v. Felder, supra.
Confusion has undoubtedly arisen in the distinction between "concurrent causes" and "intervening causes," as illustrated in *626 Pullen v. Georgia Stages and Cain v. Ga. Power Co.,
supra. In 38 Am. Jur. 715, § 63, a "concurrent cause" is defined as "a cause which was operative at the moment of the injury and acted contemporaneously with another cause to produce the injury, and which was an efficient cause in the sense that except for it the injury would not have occurred." 38 Am. Jur. 721, § 67 defines an intervening cause as "one which operates, in succession to a prior wrong, as the proximate cause of an injury. . . Accordingly, it may or may not be a good defense, as the circumstances may differ, for a defendant charged with the commission of a negligent act to show that such act, although in truth negligent, would not have resulted in the injuries complained of had it not been for the intervention of an independent cause. . . If an intervening cause is in realityonly a condition on or through which a negligent act or omissionoperates to produce an injurious result, or is set in motion by the original negligence, it does not break the line of causation so as to relieve the original wrongdoer." The test is similar to that stated in Southeastern Greyhound Lines v. Gilstrap,
The instant petition charges negligence as a matter of law against the defendant bus company, in that the driver violated Code (Ann.) § 68-314 by stopping a motor vehicle on a highway less than 8 feet from the center line thereof; that he violated § 68-303 (a) in not placing his vehicle while not in motion as near the right side of the highway as practicable; and that he violated § 68-303 (f) in not extending his hand while stopping. We will not consider the latter charge because the petition, in alleging that Mrs. Waters was gazing off at a 90° angle, shows on its face that she would not have seen the hand if extended, and that this particular act of negligence was not therefore a concurrent proximate cause of the collision. However, the allegations of the petition are such that, if supported by evidence, the jury would be authorized to find that Mrs. *627 Waters would not have collided with the bus had it observed the law and pulled over before stopping to a distance of 8 feet from the center line of the highway. The jury would also be authorized to find that, no matter how gross her negligence may have been, she would not have struck the bus if it had not illegally stopped in front of her. In that case, the collision would not have occurred and the plaintiff who was a guest in her car would not have been injured. The petition, therefore, alleges acts and omissions constituting conduct on the part of both parties which amounts either to negligence per se or what would authorize the jury to find to be common-law negligence, and, having so found, the jury would be further authorized to find that such negligence on the part of both parties concurred in proximately causing the injury.
Some confusion has apparently also arisen through an erroneous application of Code § 105-603, stating that a plaintiff who by ordinary care could have avoided the consequences to himself of the defendant's negligence is not entitled to recover. This is essentially the doctrine of last clear chance. In the case of L. N. Ry. v. Patterson, supra, there is language which might indicate that, where one has an opportunity to avoid the acts of negligence of another and fails to do so, such failure amounts to the sole proximate cause of the injury to a person injured by reason of the negligence of both parties under the last-clear-chance doctrine. We do not believe such language was intended to be so construed, as this rule of law does not apply where a third party, not himself at fault, sues joint tort-feasors. In 92 A.L.R. (Ann.), page 55, it is stated: "It is of first importance in considering the doctrine of last clear chance to recognize its limited scope and function. As already pointed out, whether viewed as a phase of the principle of proximate cause or not, it has no function to perform unless the injured person was himself chargeable with negligence which, apart from the doctrine, would preclude recovery." In guest cases wherein the negligence of the host is not imputable under the theory of joint adventure or some other theory of law, and where the guest plaintiff himself is guilty of no negligence, the mere fact that the host was grossly negligent can not operate to invoke the last-clear-chance doctrine, the injured person himself not being *628
chargeable with contributing to his injuries. In Longino v.Moore,
We therefore conclude: (1) Where certain conduct is alleged to be negligent, it is a jury question to determine whether or not such conduct constitutes negligence, if reasonable minds might differ upon the question. See Jordan v. Lee,
The order of the trial court overruling the general demurrers to the petition was without error.
3. Special demurrers were interposed to parts of paragraphs 4 and 5 of the petition, alleging knowledge by the driver of the bus as to certain facts pleaded, and that the driver "failed to make himself acquainted" with other facts pleaded, it being shown in what way the knowledge was available to him. Such statements are not demurrable as conclusions, but are allegations of ultimate material facts. See Warner Bros. Pictures v.Stanley,
Special demurrers are directed to allegations of negligence on the part of the bus driver, "in failing to anticipate that Mrs. Waters would violate traffic regulations while he himself was violating the law," and "in failing to move the bus forward and to the right, although he was either actually aware or could by the slightest degree of care make himself aware of her misconduct . . by the use of . . the mirrors described herein," on the ground that there was no duty on the driver to anticipate or become aware of such negligence. In Williams v. Grier,
(c) There is no merit in the remaining grounds of special demurrer.
The trial court did not err in overruling the demurrers and in sustaining the motion to strike the plea to the jurisdiction.
Judgment affirmed. MacIntyre, P. J., and Gardner, J., concur. *630