The appellant, the widow of Morris K. Stern, sued the appellee for the wrongful death of her husband. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the appellee.
At about dusk on September 6, 1973, the appellee negligently lost control of her automobile near Interstate 285 in Atlanta. She broke through a chain-link fence and collided with Mr. Stem’s car, which was traveling on the freeway. Stern’s vehicle spun around and came to a stop facing the wrong direction in the middle of the three northbound lanes of traffic. Mr. Stern emerged from his car, appearing to suffer only from a cut lip, and reached a position of safety on the side of the highway to wait for the police. He was visibly upset and excited. Ten to twenty minutes later, before the police arrived, Stem returned to his car, apparently to obtain a piece of paper, and was killed by a passing car while in the roadway.
The appellee contends that these facts fail to show the existence of proximate cause linking the appellant’s negligence with Mr. Stem’s death and that, as a matter of law, Stern assumed the risk and failed to use ordinary care to avoid the appellee’s negligence.
1. Summary judgment may not be granted if there is a genuine issue of material fact. Code Ann. § 81A-156 (c) (Ga. L. 1966, pp. 609, 660; 1967, pp. 226, 238). We hold that in this case there exists a genuine issue of material fact as to proximate cause. "Questions of negligence and diligence and of cause and proximate cause and whose negligence constituted the proximate cause of the
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plaintiffs injuries are, except in plain, palpable and indisputable cases, solely for the jury, and the courts will decline to decide such questions . . . unless reasonable minds cannot differ as to the conclusions to be reached.”
Hardy v. Brooks,
In Georgia, the law regarding proximate cause has been stated as follows: " 'A defendant may be held liable where it appears that his negligence was the sole cause of the injury complained of, or that his negligence put in operation other causal forces which were the direct, natural, and probable consequences of the defendant’s original act, or that the intervening agency could reasonably have been foreseen by the defendant as original wrong-doer.’”
Reid v. Modern Roofing &c. Works,
It is certainly possible that the appellee could have
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foreseen the possibility of subsequent collisions with the Stern vehicle. It is a matter of common knowledge, at least to anyone with driving experience, that there is a very high possibility of subsequent collisions on a busy freeway. It is also likely that persons might be in or around the disabled vehicle after the collision, either due to injuries sustained from the collision, or for some valid purpose, such as to move obstructions, deliver warnings to others, or to retrieve personal property from the vehicle, and that such persons could be injured by any subsequent collisions. The appellant did not need to prove that the appellee might or should have seen the likelihood of the particular injury or harm, the extent of the harm, or the manner in which it occurred, but only that she should have anticipated that some injury or harm might result from her conduct.
Williams v. Grier,
The appellee cited several cases which would appear to uphold the summary judgment below. In
Davis v. City of Toccoa,
Since the appellee was negligent in creating the dangerous situation in the instant case, and since there are facts and favorable inferences by which a jury could conclude that the subsequent occurrences were a natural *707 and foreseeable result that did not so preponderate as to insulate the appellee from liability, the issue of proximate cause should be submitted to the jury for determination.
2. For the reasons discussed above, there exists a genuine issue of material fact as to assumption of risk and use of ordinary care to avoid the negligence of another. These issues properly address themselves to the jury and not the court
(Bli Const. Co. v. Debari,
In the present case, these questions are not so "plain and palpable,” since there are facts and favorable inferences from the evidence by which a jury could find that the decedent’s actions were either a reasonable response to the dangerous situation created by the appellee’s negligence, or that his actions resulted from an impairment of his judgment due to the injuries and agitation naturally resulting from the appellee’s negligence.
Judgment reversed.
