(After stating the foregoing facts.) As to the necessity of sustaining a motion to strike a case from the docket, where a general demurrer has been sustained and the case dismissed unless within a specified time an amendment is offered
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curing the defect, it is held in
Gamble
v.
Gamble,
193
Ga.
591, 595 (supra): “Under numerous rulings of this court, where the order sustaining the demurrer allowed a definite time, in this case 30 days, within which an amendment meeting the grounds of the demurrer might be filed, and provided that, if no such amendment was filed within the time allowed the suit should 'stand dismissed,’ if no amendment meeting the grounds of the demurrer was filed the suit was automatically dismissed.
Clark
v.
Ganson,
144
Ga.
544 (
It is not within the province of this decision to determine whether or not the trial court correctly sustained the general demurrers in the first instance, since this judgment, not having been excepted to, is now the law of this case. It must therefore be accepted as true that the petition as originally filed affirmatively shows, when construed most strongly against the pleader, that the plaintiff’s own negligence and want of ordinary care was the proximate cause of the injury and damage. The plaintiff in his original petition set out facts showing that the wrecker blocked his side of the highway; that, when he first saw it, he was 45 feet from it; that he immediately applied his brakes, but in spite of this collided with it. The collision might presumably have been avoided in one of two ways—either to pass around the wrecker, or to stop before colliding with it. The plaintiff alleged that he was unable to pass around the wrecker because of approaching traffic. He did not allege that he was unable to see the obstacle in his path in time to stop or otherwise show why he was unable to stop. The amendment merely alleged that the plaintiff’s headlights were burning. This cannot
*25
be said to meet the criticism of the general demurrer that “the allegations affirmatively show that the injury and damage for which the plaintiff sues were caused solely by his own negligence or want of ordinary care.” Nothing in the amendment, if the petition originally showed lack of ordinary care and that the plaintiff’s damage was proximately caused by his own negligence, changes that state of facts, it still not being shown why the plaintiff was unable to stop his car, and the petition as it now stands with the amendment must be held to continue to be subject to the same defect. It has frequently been held to be negligence to drive a car at such a speed that one .is unable to stop within the distance of one’s lights at the time. See
Pollard
v.
Clifton,
62
Ga. App.
573 (
Counsel for the defendant contends that this case should fall under the ruling in
Folsom
v.
Howell,
94
Ga.
112 (
As Judge Jenkins pointed out in his excellent discussion of this subject in
Smith
v.
Bugg,
35
Ga. App.
317 (
This ruling is not in conflict with
Bradshaw
V.
Crawford,
77
Ga. App.
441 (
The trial court erred in overruling the motion to strike the case from the docket.
Judgment reversed.
