In his fourth enumeration the plaintiff contends that the court erred in allowing an investigating officer to testify, over objection, that if he remembered correctly, a summons was made out to the plaintiff’s parents charging them with having an illegal or unlicensed vehicle on the street. Whatever charges an investigating officer may have placed against the parents of the minor plaintiff involved in the collision is entirely irrelevant and of no probative value in determining the issues of negligence and proximate cause in the trial of the civil action based on the collision. See
Keebler v. Willard,
The fifth enumeration is directed to the -instructions on unavоidable accident, as requested by the defendants and given by the trial judge, in language substantially the same as quoted in
Brewer v. Gittings,
*854
Error is assigned in thе sixth enumeration on requested instructions, as given, “that the law does not impose any duty on a person to guard against sudden, unforeseen, and not reasonably to be anticipated acts of another person.” The language is based on the first headnote in
Cone v.
Davis,
Error is assigned in the seventh enumeration on the giving of requested instructiоns that “normally it is the duty of parents, by their presence or training, to keep young children from going into places of obvious danger,” and in the eighth enumeration on the failure of the court, in recharging the jury to instruct the jury specifically to disregard the instructions complained of in the seventh enumeration. In recharging the jury the court quoted almost verbatim his previous instructions, and followed this with language substantially identical to Code § 105-205, as follows: “For the negligence of one person to be properly imputable to another, the one to whom it is imputed must stand in such a relatiоn or privity to the negligent person as to create the relation of principal and agent. In a suit by an infant, the fault of the parent, or of custodians selected by *855 the parents, is nоt imputable to the child.” Given as a recharge it emphasizes and clearly eliminates from jury consideration the effect of the instructions previously given, which might otherwise cause the jury to believe that the minor plaintiff was not entitled to recover if his parents were negligent in allowing him to be on the streets under the circumstances here shown.
Error is assigned in the ninth through twelfth enumerаtions on the giving of requested instructions extracted from the Uniform Act Regulating Traffic on Highways to show that violations are a misdemeanor offense (Sec. 102 (a); Ga. L. 1953, Nov. Sess., pp. 556, 602;
Code Ann.
§ 68-1701 (a)), to show whаt signal lamps or devices may or shall be required (Sec. 112 (a); Ga. L. 1953, Nov. Sess., pp. 556, 608;
Code Ann.
§ 68-1712 (a)), to show brake requirements including two separate means and maintenance requirements (Sec. 115 (a) 1, 5 (с); Ga. L. 1953, Nov. Sess., pp. 556, 611;
Code Ann.
§ 68-1715 (a) 1, 5 (c)), and to show that every vehicle must be in good working order and safe mechanical condition (Sec. 123; Ga. L. 1953, Nov. Sess., pp. 556, 615; Ga. L. 1963, pp. 333, 334;
Code Ann.
§ 68-1723). The objections to these instructions were preserved before verdict in the manner set forth in Division 2 of this opinion. The gist of the objections to the instructions as requested is that there is no showing that the vehicle was unsafе, or that if a violation is shown, it had nothing to do with the collision. While it is obvious from the evidence that the vehicle did not meet the requirements of these regulations, we find no causal conneсtion between the fact that the vehicle failed to meet these standards and the fact, of the collision. Nevertheless, even if some causal connection should appear, a child not yet age 10 is incapable of negligence per se in violating these regulations, the violation of which is a misdemeanor, as showing his own tortious conduct to defeat or diminish his claim, for, under
Code
§ 105-1806, if he were defending a claim, he could claim immunity for his conduct as a defendant who had not “arrived at those years of discretion and accountability prescribed by this Code for criminal offenses.” In applying
Code
§ 26-302, fixing age 10 in general as the minimum for conviction of any offense, the courts interpret this section to mean that a child
*856
under 10 is totally incapable оf committing any criminal offense. See
Ford v. State,
In the thirteenth enumeration the plaintiff complains of the giving of requested instructions to the effect that if the defendant understood the arm аnd hand movement of the plaintiff as a signal to pass on his left at the intersection, she had a right to pass at the intersection. Counsel for the plaintiff objected on the basis that the aсts of the plaintiff afforded no authority for the defendant to violate the prohibition against passing at an intersection, and preserved the objection as shown in Division 2 of the opinion. While § 59 (a) 2 of the Uniform Act Regulating Traffic on the Highways (Ga. L. 1953, Nov. Sess., pp. 556, 583; Code Ann. § 68-1637 (b) (2)) prohibits driving on the left side of the roadway when within 100 feet of or traversing any intersection, it does not specifically proscribe the actual passing on the left of another vehicle at an intersection, and the evidence does not demand a finding that the minor defendant was actually violating the statute. Even if the jury could conclude that she violated thе statute, however, we see no basis for instructing the jury that the action of the child, by his arm and hand movements, even if understood by her to mean to proceed, gave her a right to violate thе law, and in this sense the instruction as given was prejudicial error.
In the fourteenth and fifteenth enumerations it is asserted that certain requested instructions as given imply, in the absence of any specific qualification, that the standard of care applicable to the plaintiff is the same as that of an adult. Having instructed the jury as to the standard of care expected оf a child (Code § 105-204) it was unnecessary to repeat such instructions in each instance when referring to the negligence of the plaintiff.
A verdict for the defendants not being demanded under the evidence, and reversal of the verdict and judgment being required for other reasons, we make no further ruling on the *857 first three enumerations, which are identical to the general grounds of a motion for new trial.
Judgment reversed.
