25 Ga. App. 513 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1920
(After stating the foregoing facts.) The plaintiffs right to recover must necessarily depend upon the defendant’s negligence as the proximate cause of the injury. She, of course,
In the ease under consideration each party, in operating his automobile in violation of a criminal statute, was clearly negligent as a matter of law. Whether or not the evidence demanded the inference that such negligence upon the part of either party in any manner contributed to or caused the injury must necessarily depend upon whether or not a causal relation between the negligence and the injury was conclusively shown or was made an issue by the evidence. While each party was violating a criminal statute, they were not acting jointly, but the act of each was a separate and distinct criminal act. Although they were acting contemporaneously and violating the same statute, this does not render their actions joint. The injury to the deceased, therefore, may have been caused either by his own negligence or by that of the defendant. If he was injured by the defendant’s negligence and not by
Even though both parties were not acting jointly in violation of a criminal statute, it is suggested that they were nevertheless committing a joint act of negligence in racing at a dangerous rate of speed along a public highway. Whether or not they were thus negligent, and whether or not .such negligence was the proximate cause of the injury, were questions for the jury.
Since the verdict for the defendant was not demanded, the first grant of a new trial setting it aside will not be disturbed.
Judgment affirmed.