We note that the record on appeal in this, case contains the stipulation that “the only question presented in this appeal is the sufficiency of the defendant appellant Elbert Potter’s alleged cross-action, as contained in his answer.” Hence we will confine our consideration to the facts alleged in defendant Elbert Potter’s cross complaint as the basis for subjecting the appellees to contingent liability fоr contribution as joint tort-feasors.
The right of one defendant sued in tort to maintain a cross action against another to determine his contingent liability for contribution in the event of recovery by the plaintiff is conferred by statute, G.S. 1-240, and recognized in numerous decisions of this Court.
White v. Keller, post,
p. 97;
Evans v. Johnson,
In order to maintain a cross action against another for contribution under this statute, the original defendant must allegе facts sufficient to show that both of them are liable to the plaintiff as joint tort-feasors.
Hayes v. Wilmington, supra.
It will not be sufficient for this purpose if the facts alleged merely make it appear that the injurious acts of which the plaintiff complains were those of “an outside agency or responsible third pеrson,” as defined in
Smith v. Sink,
“It is the joint tort and common liability to suit which gives rise to the right to enforce contribution under the statute.” Tarkington v. Printing Co., supra.
“To constitute two or more persons joint tort-feasors the negligent or wrongful act of the one must be so united in time and circumstance with the negligent or tortious act of the other that the two acts in fact constitute but one transaction.”
Shaw v. Barnard,
In the case at bar the pleadings tend to show that on a curve in a much traveled two-lane highway, in the village of Auburn, the defendant Goldman had left his automobile standing on the paved portion of the highway. The front of Goldman’s automobile was toward the west. In that situation the truck of defendant Frosty Morn Meats, Inc., driven by defendant Cobb, moving west, drove up behind the Goldman automobile and stopped without any signal being given of intention so to do. Thereafter the defendant Elbert Pottеr, also traveling west, drove his automobile into the rear of the truck of the corporate defendant, causing injury to plaintiff Norma Potter who was a passenger in defendant Potter’s automobile. It was alleged in the complaint that defendant Potter was negligent in failing to keep proрer lookout and driving at unsafe distance back of the truck. It was also alleged by the defendant Potter that the truck of defendant Frosty Morn Meats, Inc., had been driven carelessly and at unlawful speed. But these last allegations may be disregarded as the truck was standing still at the time of the collision. Wе observe that appellant’s cross complaint is lacking in definite statement as to what occurred on this occasion, and deals more in general expressions.
It is not alleged how long the truck had been stopped on the highway before the defendant Potter’s automobile struck it, but аpparently for an appreciable space of time. We note that the court previously, on substantially similar allegations, had sustained the demurrer of these defendants to the complaint of the plaintiff, who was a passenger in defendant Potter’s automobile, and had dismissed them frоm plaintiff’s action. It would seem to follow that any negligence on the part of the driver of the truck in failing to give a signal of his intentions to stop as required by the statute had ceased to operate, and that it was the active negligence of defendant Potter in failing to observe the truck and avoid the collision which proximately caused the plaintiff’s injury. The
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principle is recognized in
Butner v. Spease,
The facts in this case in some respects appear similar to those in
McLaney v. Motor Freight,
The same principle was applied in
Hollifield v. Everhart,
Also in the recent case of
Loving v. Whitton,
. . the conduct of Gibson may not be held to constitute one of the proximate causes of the collision. The conduct of Whitton made the collision inevitable, insulated any prior negligence of Gibson, and constitutes the sole proximate cause of the collision.”
In the case of
Garner v. Pittman,
Likewise the same principle is illustrated in
Smith v. Grubb,
We reach the conclusion that the facts allegеd in defendant Potter’s cross complaint, upon which he seeks to hold the defendants Frosty Morn Meats, Inc., and Luther Cobb in the case in order to detеrmine their contingent liability to him as joint tort-feasors under the statute, are insufficient for that purpose, and that the judgment sustaining the demurrer should be upheld.
Affirmed.
