Contribution between joint tortfeasors was not allowed at common law on the theory that the law would not aid those who were in pari delicto. Our Code, § 105-2012, provides: “If judgment is entered jointly against several trespassers, and is paid off by one, the others shall be liable to him for contribution.” Under this Code section, which gives a new statutory right, it would appear that a defendant is entitled to contribution from his codefendants when these two elements exist—that is, that the judgment has been entered against both
*596
and that it has actually been paid by one in an amount exceeding his pro rata share. In this view, an actual assignment of a judgment, or having execution issued and payment entered thereon under Code § 39-608 (which is but a cumulative remedy for enforcing contribution, see
City of Rome
v.
Southern Ry Co.,
50
Ga. App.
185,
Secondly, the amendment does not meet the requirement of a setoff of mutual demands for the reason that the plaintiff’s right of action for contribution accrued only upon payment of the judgment, which date was subsequent to the filing of this suit. In
Huey
v.
Stewart,
69
Ga.
768 (3) it was held: “A mere recovery against complainant being alleged in the original bill, with no allegation of payment, he would not, on that ground, have the right to contribution from the representative of his coadministrator. Payments made after this case was begun would avail nothing.” Code § 20-1302 relative to setoff provides that the mutual demands must exist at the time of the commencement of the suit. See also
Fuller
v.
Coker,
24
Ga. App.
418 (2a) (
Code § 38-202 provides: “The general character of the parties, and especially their conduct in other transactions, are irrelevant matter, unless the nature of the action involves such character and renders necessary or proper the investigation of such conduct.” Special ground 5 of the amended motion for new trial assigns error on the exclusion by the court of testimony on cross-examination of a witness for the defendants, a resident ■engineer of the Georgia State Highway Department under whose supervision the construction of the Cartersville by-pass was proceeding, to the effect that it is in the specifications of their contracts that a pneumatic roller be used to pack the road during ■certain periods of construction; that at this time compaction by rubber-tired traction is helpful. One of the main issues in the ■case was whether the defendants were as a matter of fact attempting to keep traffic off the by-pass or whether they were allowing or even encouraging its presence. The testimony excluded was relevant as showing a reason why the contractors, .as contended by the plaintiff, made no effort to warn traffic to ■stay off the project because they benefited from the presence of vehicles going over, and thus tending to impact, the surface of the road.
The plaintiff alleged in his petition that the collision ■occurred on U. S. Highway 41 and "that said highway at the point of said collision was not paved at said time but that the public in general were using said highway at said time” and also ■that “said highway at the time and place complained of was a public highway in that the general public was using said highway.” Negligence is alleged in driving at a rate of speed greater than was reasonable and prudent under the conditions existing ■on the highway, in driving in a southerly direction along a northbound traffic lane, in failing to reduce speed while rounding a ■curve; in failing to reduce speed upon approaching a place on ■the highway when the way ahead was not free and clear from ■oncoming traffic and visibility was obscured, and in driving into the plaintiff’s vehicle when the latter was in its proper lane of -traffic for vehicles traveling in a northerly direction. Accordingly, the case must stand, if at all, on the proposition that the road
*598
in question was at the time a public highway. Code § 68-1504 (1) (a) defines a highway as follows: “The entire width between the boundary lines of every way publicly maintained when any part thereof is open to the use of the public for purposes of vehicular travel.” In
Southern Ry. Co.
v.
Combs,
124
Ga.
1004, 1006 (
It is undisputed that the road in question was intended to form an improved link in the existing highway system; that at the time in question the work of preparing it for this purpose was in progress; that it was intended to be, but had not yet been, paved; that it was accordingly under the supervision and control of the contractors who were working on it; that it was the duty of such contractors, if they wished to keep the general public off the road, to place barricades or notices to this effect along roads turning off from the old U. S. Highway 41 and entering or crossing the new highway at various places other than the two ends where construction was to commence and end and the new and old highways to rejoin. Whether the contractors and persons in charge of the construction had done this was one of the most widely disputed issues in the case. There was, however, evidence which would authorize the jury to believe that such signs and barricades were not in existence on the day in question, from which it may be inferred that the persons in charge of the construction had no obj ection to the general public using the roadway; that the general public actually did use the
*599
roadway on that day and had been doing so for some time, and that no effort was being made to stop this from happening. There seems to be no Georgia case involving the question of whether it takes a completion of the project, withdrawal of the construction workers, and an actual turning over of the highway to the public or to governmental authorities for public purposes to mark the beginning point of a public highway, as contended by the plaintiff in error, or whether acquiescence in user by the public on the part of those upon whom rests the duty of including the public during construction would be sufficient, or whether mere user, even without acquiescence but with no affirmative act to bar such user, would turn a roadway under construction into .a public highway. Under the wording of Code § 68-1504, supra, it would be necessary to show only that it was publicly maintained, and that the part in question was open for vehicular traffic. In Payne
v.
State Hwy. Commission,
The driver of the defendant’s truck testified that on the day in question there were cars on the highway, some going north and some going south; that the vehicles headed north were all using the east lane of traffic and those going south were using the west lane; that he was headed south in the east traffic lane and that he could not see the plaintiff’s automobile because of the dust between them until just before they collided. The de
*600
fendant’s driver was accordingly on notice that he was traveling south in a northbound traffic lane and was going against all of the traffic (other than trucks used in the construction work) in that lane, and he was also aware of the impaired visibility due to dust raised on the road by the traffic. His action in continuing south in the northbound traffic lane under this state of facts clearly presented a jury issue as to the defendant’s negligence. Also on the question of whether the plaintiff’s conduct amounted to such negligence as to bar recovery, Code § 105-603 provides as follows: “If the plaintiff by ordinary care could have avoided the consequences to himself caused by the defendant’s negligence, he is not entitled to recover. In other cases the defendant is not relieved, although the plaintiff may in some way have contributed to the injury sustained.” Whether the plaintiff failed to show such care for his own safety is ordinarily a jury question.
Southern Stages, Inc.
v.
Clements,
71
Ga. App.
169 (2c) (
The trial court erred in overruling the demurrers to the amendment to the cross-action, and in denying the motion for new trial as amended.
Judgment reversed.
