The plaintiff brings this suit to recover damages of the defendant by reason of personal injuries sustained while riding in the truck of the defendant as his guest as a result of the alleged gross negligence of the defendant in the operation of his truck, and also to recover for loss of his wife’s services and for medical expenses for himself and his wife.
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“In order for an invited guest in an automobile to recover of the owner and driver of the car for an injury occasioned by the negligence of the driver, it must be pleaded that such negligence was gross negligence.”
Epps
v.
Parrish,
26
Ga. App.
399 (
However, it is insisted that the petition was subject to dismissal on general demurrer because it had been adjudicated that the defendant was not liable by reason of the operation
*242
of the truck on said occasion. This is so, the defendant contends, because the wife filed suit against the defendant in said court, in which she sought damages for personal injuries resulting to her by reason of the defendant’s gross negligence in the operation of his truck on the occasion in question, to which petition the defendant had demurred generally, which demurrer was overruled, and this court on March 7, 1952, reversed that ruling, holding that the petition in that case “showed that the plaintiff did not exercise ordinary care for her own safety.”
Williams
v.
Owens,
85
Ga. App.
549 (
A judgment sustaining a general demurrer to a petition brought to recover damages caused by the alleged negligence of the defendant will bar a second suit by the same plaintiff against the same defendant for the same alleged cause of action, though the grounds of negligence upon which the second petition is based may be different from those embraced in the first.
Greene
*243
v.
Central of Georgia Ry. Co.,
112
Ga.
859 (
So, “if a court of competent jurisdiction, in dismissing a suit on demurrer, necessarily decides upon the merits of the case, the decision, as between the same parties and upon the same subject matter, may be pleaded in bar of another suit.”
Hill
v.
Armour Fertilizer Works,
21
Ga. App.
45 (
The petition was not subject to the grounds of demurrer urged thereto, and the court erred in rendering the judgment excepted to.
Judgment reversed.
