(After stating the foregoing facts.) It is contended -by the first ground of the amended motion for a new trial that the plaintiff is entitled to a new trial as against the codefendant, J. W. Smallwood, because the case as to the latter was in default at the time of the trial and the court correctly charged the jury to this effect; that as a matter of fact the trial court has granted her a new trial as to Smallwood and, this being so, she is entitled' as a matter of law to a new trial as to the other defendants. To this effect counsel cite
Irwin
v.
Riley,
68
Ga.
605;
Gilstrap
v.
Leith,
24
Ga. App.
720 (
It is contended in ground two that the trial judge erred in charging in effect that the plaintiff, to recover against Benton Rapid Express, must prove that its negligence was the proximate cause of her husband’s death, when he should have charged that she would be entitled to recover if the jury found the defendant to be negligent and that its negligence, together with the negligence of the codefendant, combined to produce the injury. This is, of course, the proper charge. However, in order to have recovered against Benton Rapid Express alone the plaintiff would have had to prove that this defendant’s negligence was the proximate cause of the injury. The court correctly charged that if the defendants “were jointly and concurrently negligent in one or more ways alleged and that such joint and concurrent negligence was the proximate cause” of the death, *824 they should find against all the defendants. He also charged that if the negligence of the defendant Smallwood was the sole proximate cause of the injury there 'could be no recovery against this defendant, and this portion of the charge is assigned as error in special ground 7. The evidence being in conflict, the jury might have found that Smallwood’s reckless driving was the sole proximate cause of the collision, or they might have found that this negligence concurred with the negligence of the other defendants if they believed that the truck was in fact parked without lights in a position extending out into the highway. Construed as a whole, the charge shows no error in this regard which would have prejudiced or misled the jury. Grounds 2 and 7 are therefore without merit.
Grounds 3, 6, 8, 9, 10 and 11 deal with charges of the court as to the duty of a guest to warn the driver of danger, as follows: “I charge you that if the plaintiff’s husband, by ordinary care, could have avoided the consequences to himself caused by the defendant’s negligence, she is not entitled to recover. . . I charge you that the negligence of the driver of an automobile is not imputable to a passenger who had no right or was under no duty to control or influence the driver’s conduct in driving the automobile. While the negligence of the driver of an automobile cannot be imputed to a passenger under the circumstances I have just stated to you, yet the passenger could not close his eyes to known or obvious danger arising either from acts of the driver of the automobile in which he is riding or from the acts of others. If there is danger from either cause and the circumstances are such that it would become apparent to a person of ordinary prudence in like circumstances, then it is the duty of the passenger to do whatever a person of ordinary prudence would or should do under the same or similar circumstances . . and you further find the deceased could not have avoided the consequence of said defendant’s negligence after it became apparent to the deceased, or he could have discovered the same by the exercise of ordinary care. . . I charge you that a passenger, unless he has notice to the contrary, may assume that neither the driver of the automobile in which he is riding nor others will be negligent. While the negligence of John Smallwood, if any, is not imputable to the plaintiff’s hus *825 band, nevertheless, I charge you that Mr. Johnson as a passenger could not close his eyes to known or obvious dangers arising either from the acts of John Smallwood or the acts of others and if there is danger from either cause and the circumstances are such that it would become apparent to a person of ordinary prudence in all the circumstances, then it became the duty of the plaintiff’s husband to do whatever in the opinion of the jury a person of ordinary prudence would or should have done in the same or like circumstances. . . If you find that John Small-wood was under the influence of intoxicating liquor and incompetent to drive and that that fact was known to the plaintiff’s husband or in the exercise of ordinary care he could have known it, and that plaintiff’s husband in riding with John Smallwood under such circumstances failed to exercise ordinary care for his own safety and his failure to do so was the direct and proximate cause of his injuries, the plaintiff cannot recover. . . I charge you that if Russell Johnson knew or in the exercise of ordinary care could have known that John Smallwood was under the influence of intoxicating liquor or incompetent to drive, but nevertheless rode in the automobile with that knowledge and that Johnson in this respect failed to exercise ordinary care for his own safety and his failure to do so was the direct and proximate cause of his death, his widow cannot recover, that is, recover of the defendants, Benton Rapid Express Inc. and Cecil Collis.” In addition, ground 9 excepts to the following: “I charge you that if Russell Johnson knew or in the exercise of ordinary care should have known that John Smallwood, the driver, was incompetent or careless or driving at'a reckless and dangerous rate of speed, if the jury should find that these conditions existed, Mr. Johnson should have notified Smallwood of the danger, and if after warning Smallwood of such carelessness and recklessness, if any, the warning was unheeded by Smallwood, a duty might devolve upon Johnson to have insisted that Smallwood stop the automobile and allow him to get out or under the circumstances to take other suitable action to protect himself from this recklessness, if there was such, I charge you that one who knowingly and voluntarily takes a risk of injury to his person, the danger of which is so obvious at the time as in and of itself to amount to a failure to exercise ordinary care and diligence for his own *826 safety, cannot hold another liable in damages for injuries thus occasioned.” (Italics ours.)
It is observed that the portion of the charge dealing with this issue is exceedingly lengthy. Those grounds of complaint charging that there was no evidence upon which to base the instructions are without merit, since, as seen from the statement of facts, the jury would have been authorized, had it believed certain of the witnesses and disbelieved others, to conclude that the deceased and his companions had been drinking, and they might have concluded from all the attendant circumstances that this explained the actions of the defendant Smallwood in driving at a rapid speed in a heavy rainstorm at night and running into a parked truck. They might have inferred from the circumstances of the deceased’s having spent the afternoon with him that he was aware that Smallwood had been drinking, and that he ought, in the exercise of ordinary care, to have known that this had impaired Smallwood’s ability to drive. See
Smeltzer
v.
Atlanta Coach Co.,
49
Ga. App.
765(3) (
Counsel for the defendants rely on
Mann
v.
Harmon,
62
Ga. App.
231 (5) (
Special grounds 3, 6, 8, 10 and 11 are without merit. The excerpt complained of in special ground 9 is error requiring reversal.
Grounds 14, 15 and 16 of the amended motion complain of the admission over objection of certain testimony of Kelton Smallwood, the third occupant of the car, elicited by cross-examination, to the effect that he had seen his brother, the driver, on other occasions when the latter was too drunk to drive. Code § 38-202 provides as follows: “The general character of the parties, and especially their conduct in other transactions, are irrelevant matter, unless the nature of the action involves such character and renders necessary or proper the investigation of such conduct.” Also, as stated in
Cox
v. Norris, 70
Ga. App.
580, 583 (
There being evidence, as discussed above, from which the jury might have been authorized to find that the defendant Smallwood was intoxicated, there was no error in charging the provisions of Code § 68-307 relative to operation of motor vehicles while under the influence of intoxicants, or in charging that such a violation would be negligence per se, as contended in grounds 4, 5 and 12 of the amended motion.
*830
Objection is made in special ground 13 to sustaining an objection to the following question on the ground that it was leading and called for a conclusion: “You testified that the back end of this truck was parked about three feet from the curb line and assuming the truck was eight feet wide, would that throw it out beyond where this new pavement started into the old pavement?” The witness testified without objection as follows: “I couldn’t say how wide that big truck was, it looked like it was eight feet or such a matter. I couldn’t say whether the left side of the truck looking towards Macon was all within the new pavement or part of it in the road.” Consequently, and without passing on the merits of the objection, it appears that the witness gave precisely the information called for without objection, and there could have been no error prejudicial to the plaintiff in sustaining it. See
Warnell
v.
Ponder,
54
Ga. App.
1 (5) (
Ground 17 complains that the court charged that it was the defendant Smallwood’s duty to have his automobile equipped with headlights capable of revealing objects 500 feet ahead of the car when he should have said “500 feet ahead in the darkness,” that this charge was not adjusted to the evidence, and that it led the jury to believe that unless the car was so equipped Smallwood would be solely, rather than concurrently, liable for any injuries. Granting that the wording suggested- is the proper statement of the law (See Code, Ann. Supp., § 68-316), this court is of the opinion that, in this case, the error was harmless and that there was nothing therein which would have led the jury to adopt such a misconception of the case.
The trial court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial for the reasons set out in the third and fourth divisions of this opinion.
Judgment reversed.
