The evidence is sufficient to sustain the verdict of the jury in favor of the defendants. We have set out all the evidence which relates to the manner in which the defendant, Mrs. Grant, approached Highway 23 and there is nothing which is contrary to the verdict of the jury. The evidence supports the verdict as to the general grounds.
Special ground 1 assigns error because the court sustained an objection to a question by counsel for the plaintiff, and the answer of the plaintiff thereto. Counsel propounded the following question: “Mrs. Parsons, immediately following your accident and for sometime therefrom, were you able to perform your household duties?” The plaintiff answered: “I wasn’t able to do my housework like washing and ironing for almost two years.” Counsel for the plaintiff contends that this testimony was relevant and material and that the exclusion of such was hurtful and prejudicial to the plaintiff and that such refusal to permit the testimony denied her the right to prove the allegations of her petition and was highly prejudicial and harmful to her. The question of the extent of injuries to the plaintiff and the alleged resulting inability to perform certain duties did not go to the question of whose negligence and what negligence caused the collision, and had no bearing upon the question of the liability or non-liability of the defendants. The jury determined that the
*435
acts of the defendants were not the causative factor and that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. Evidence as to the injuries of the plaintiff, if permitted, would have no -bearing on determining the negligence of the parties concerned and could not have produced a different verdict. See
Rountree & Co.
v.
Gaulden,
123
Ga.
449 (4) (
Special ground 2 assigns error because it is contended that the court erred in instructing the jury as follows: “If, on the other hand, a member of his family should keep or maintain a car for his or her own personal pleasure, the acts in using such car would not be imputable to the husband, or parent, as the case might be.” This excerpt followed this charge of the court on this point: “As previously stated to you, in giving you the contentions of the parties, the plaintiff contends that the automobile being driven by Mrs. Naomi J. Grant was the automobile of B.
W.
Grant, that he kept and maintained the automobile as a family use car and that Mrs. Grant was his wife, and, therefore, if she was negligent in the operation of that automobile the negligence would be imputed to her husband, B. W. Grant. The law is that if there is negligence on the part of a member of his fam
*436
ily in using the automobile for the purpose intended- for it to be used, as the agent of the husband or parent, the negligence of the member of the family would be imputable to the husband, or parent, as the case might be.” It will thus be seen that the court covered fully the point raised by the pleadings and the evidence and the excerpt must be construed in view of the whole charge of the court, and is harmless to the cause of the plaintiff. There is conflicting evidence as to the ownership of the car, but the jury had the duty to determine all points as to the evidence, which they resolved against the plaintiff. It was the duty of the court to charge on all points of law involved in view of the pleadings and the evidence before the court. This was done. It was necessary for the court to charge regarding the ownership of the car involved. It is our opinion that this charge is not erroneous. The Supreme Court has gone so far as to say in
Hickox
v.
Griffin,
205
Ga.
859 (3) (
It is not necessary that an erroneous charge be corrected, if the verdict was demanded by the evidence. See
Newton
v.
Mayo,
62
Ga.
11 (2). It is also true that, if a charge of a correct principle of law is not applicable to any issue made by the evidence, it is not necessarily harmful where a verdict is demanded by the evidence. See
Rentz
v.
Collins,
51
Ga. App.
782 (3) (
Special ground 3 assigns error because it is contended that the court erred in instructing the jury as follows: “As previously stated to you, the plaintiff in this case, under no circumstances, can recover damages against these defendants, or either of them, unless the defendant, the' driver and operator of the motor vehicle in which the plaintiff was a guest passenger, unless that driver and operator was guilty of what is known as gross negligence, and if guilty of gross negligence, that must be the proximate and moving cause of the injury sustained by the plaintiff.” It is contended that the charge was erroneous as an abstract principle of law, that it was misleading, confusing and argumentative; and it is further contended that it was necessary for the alleged gross negligence of Mrs. Grant to have been the moving cause of the injury sustained by the plaintiff; that Mrs. Grant was grossly negligent and such gross negligence contributed to and concurred with the negligence of Dalton and proximately caused the plaintiff’s injury, that the plaintiff was therefore entitled to recover. The petition does not plead concurring negligence on the part of the third party. In fact, paragraph 21 of the plaintiff's petition alleges that Mrs. Grant was “the direct, sole, procuring and proximate cause of your petitioner’s injury.” It appears that counsel for the plaintiff is attempting to make a distinction between “proximate cause” and “moving proximate cause.” Proximate cause is such cause as necessarily sets other causes in operation.
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To move means, among other things, “to occasion”; “to contribute to”; “to tend or lead to”. By referring to Black’s Law Dictionary, Words and phrases, and Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary, one is impressed with the exact language used in defining the two terms, and when such terminology is used in the legal sense we find no difference nor is there any difference defined in the following cases cited by counsel for the plaintiff:
Wright
v.
Southern Ry. Co.,
62
Ga. App.
316 (
Special ground 4 assigns error on the failure of the court to charge the jury, without a request, as follows: “If you find that the plaintiff in this case was injured as the direct and proximate result of joint and concurrent negligence of the defendants and a third person, and that the gross negligence of the defendants, if you find they were guilty of gross negligence, joined and concurred with the negligence of a third person and constituted the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries, then and in that event you would find a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, if you find she was otherwise entitled to recover under the evidence in this case.”
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It is contended that the charge was not covered by the general charge; that it was the contention of the plaintiff that she was injured as the direct and proximate result of the acts of gross negligence of the defendants and that the principle of law embraced in this special ground was necessarily involved under the pleadings and the evidence in the case; that such a failure to charge was harmful and deprived the plaintiff of a material contention, and that such failure to charge tended to and probably did influence the jury to find against her. It is argued by counsel for the plaintiff, in addition to cases heretofore discussed in this opinion, that
L. & N. R. Co.
v.
Ellis,
54
Ga. App.
783 (
In
Kelly
v.
Locke,
57
Ga. App.
78, 87 (
The court did not err in denying the motion for new trial.
Judgment affirmed.
