Mrs. Bеlle Vickers brought suit against the Great American Indemnity Company, to recover damages for loss of services of her minor son, Woodrow Vickers, on account of personal injuries sustained by him, due to the alleged negligence of Richard B. Vickers as a motor common carrier, through his servants, in the operation of a motor truck along a public highway of this State. The suit was brought, not against Richard B. Vickers, but against Great American Indemnity Company as the sole defendant. The plaintiffs right to recover was predicated on an insurance policy which it was alleged had been issued, pursuant to the provisions of the motor common-carrier act of 1931 (Ga. L. 1931, p. 199), to Richard B. Vickers by Great American Indemnity Company. A copy of the policy, with the riders thereon, was attached to the petition. The Grеat American Indemnity Company demurred generally to the petition, and challenged the plaintiffs right to recover upon the insurance policy in a direct action against the insurer, without first having obtained a judgment against Richard B. Vickers, or having joined him as a party defendant. The court overruled the demurrer, and the Court of Appeals affirmed that ruling. Great American Indemnity Co. v. Vickers, 53 Ga. App. 101 (
The policy attached to the petition and alleged to have been issued to Richard B. Vickers pursuant to the provisions of the аct of 1931, supra, provides that the Great American Indemnity Company has obligated itself “to pay all sums which the assured shall become liable to pay as damages imposed by law arising out of bodily injuries (and loss of services incidental thereto) including death at any time resulting therefrom, to any person,” caused from the operation of a certain motor truck of Richard B. Vickers, which motor truck caused injuries to plaintiffs minor son. Section 7 of the act of 1931 declares: “No certificate [of public convenience required under the act] shall be issued or continued in operation unless the hоlder thereof shall give and maintain bond, with adequate security, for the protection, in case of passenger-vehicles, of the passengers and baggage carried, and of the public, against injury proximately caused by the negligence of such motor common carrier, its servants or agents; and in cases of vehicles transporting
According to the language and patent intendment of the statute (act of 1931) the bonds provided for therein are solely for the benefit of those persons who by reason of the negligence of the carrier, its servants or agents, may have a causе of action for damages (Laster v. Maryland Casualty Co., 46 Ga. App. 620,
Cases involving contracts of indemnity, guaranty, and suretyship, and statutes of other States, are not controlling in the case at bar, and are helpful only when the purpose and language of the сontracts or statutes involved are sufficiently similar in purpose and language to the provisions of the act of 1931 as to call for the application of analogous legal principles; the case at bar being decided solely on the provisions of -the statute involved. In so far as the right of the injured party to sue directly upon the contract of insurance is concerned, the casе is analogous to a contract of suretyship, in that under such contracts the surety may be sued separately from the principal. Code, § 103-309. This for the reason that there is a direct obligation assumed by the surety under the contract, and the substance and not the form of the contract is the material factor in determining the right to sue directly without joining, or previously obtaining judgment against, the principal. Amos v. Continental Trust Co., 22 Ga. App. 348,
