53 Ga. App. 458 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1936
This was a suit on a “travel and pedestrian” policy issued by the Life and Casualty Insurance Company of Tennessee on James Yarbrough, with Mrs. Victoria Yarbrough, plaintiff, as beneficiary. The policy covered certain specified accidental injuries to the insured or his accidental death as therein stated, and provided that “if the insured shall, by . . collision of or by any
Where an insurance policy provides that if the insured meets
Where at the time he met his death the insured was riding within the corporate limits of the City of-College Park, Georgia, in a Eord roadster automobile, with a rumble-seat to the rear of the front seat, and was “sitting oar the body of the car in front of the rumble-seat between the rumble-seat arad the front seat of the car, with orre leg and foot inside of the rumble-seat arad oaae foot and part of the leg ora the outside of the rumble-seat” and along the body beside the rumble-seat, with his foot propped against the front of the rear fender of the automobile ora that side in order to steady himself, the insured was not violating the provisions of an ordinance of said city making it unlawful for any orre, within said corporate limits, “to ride oia any ruaaniaag-board of any automobile . . or to ride on or ioa any automobile . . by hanging onto the sides or rear thereof, or by riding therein with his . . lower limbs hanging or projecting therefrom,” within the provision of the policy of insurance sued on in this case, providing that the insurance therein provided for did not cover any loss or injury sustained by the insured “during the period of time the insured is
Under the foregoing rulings, it follows that the plaintiff’s petition set out a cause of action, and the judge did not err in overruling the general demurrer. The evidence authorized the verdict in favor of the plaintiff; and no error of law appearing, the court properly overruled the motion for new trial.
Judgment affirmed.