24 S.E.2d 869 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1943
1. A "guest" in an automobile, within the contemplation of the law that towards him the host owes only the duty of exercising slight care, is one who takes a ride in the automobile merely for his own pleasure or on his own business and without making any return or conferring any benefit upon the host other than the pleasure of his company. 18 Words Phrases, 839.
2. The status of one in or upon any part of an automobile for the purpose of conferring some benefit upon the owner and driver thereof at his request is that of an invitee, towards whom the owner and driver owes the duty of exercising ordinary care.
3. The petition alleged in substance that in response to a request from the defendant, he stood upon the rear bumper of his automobile, which was stalled, to cause it to be depressed and properly adjusted to the front bumper of another car and permit his automobile to be shoved off while the plaintiff was so engaged, and that the defendant's car was so shoved off, but that instead of stopping his car to enable the plaintiff to dismount in safety the defendant so increased the speed of his car that the plaintiff, unable in the circumstances to protect himself, was violently thrown from the bumper and onto the roadside and sustained described injury. Held, Under the facts alleged the defendant was under a duty to exercise ordinary care towards the plaintiff who, at his request, was engaged in rendering him a service in riding upon the bumper of his automobile in the circumstances named, and a jury question was presented whether or not the defendant failed to exercise the requisite care towards the plaintiff. The petition set forth a cause of action, and the court did not err in overruling the defendant's general demurrer.
Judgment affirmed. Stephens, P. J., and Felton, J.,concur.
The defendant demurred on the following grounds: (1) The petition fails to set forth any cause of action against the defendant. (2) The petition fails to set out any facts showing liability on the part of the defendant for any injuries or claims for damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff, in that the allegations of the petition demonstrate conclusively that the plaintiff, by his own acts, involuntarily (voluntarily?) placed himself in a perilous position and where the danger was obvious and imminent, and the plaintiff is not entitled to any recovery as sought in the petition, as there was a total lack of diligence on his part, and any injuries or damages sustained were due to the plaintiff's admitted negligence in assuming the risk and occupying the position between the automobiles as stated in the petition. (3) The petition is fatally defective and fails to set forth any cause of action against the defendant, for the injuries and damages sustained were unavoidable on the part of the defendant and were the result of the plaintiff's negligence and were the proximate cause of the alleged injury and damage. (4) The plaintiff, having knowingly, willingly, and deliberately imposed himself in the position causing the damages alleged to have been sustained, assumed the risk and consequences, and should not recover. The court overruled the demurrer, and the exception is to that judgment.