As to the demurrers, the sole contention of the plaintiff in error is that neither count sets out a cause of action based on lack of ordinary care only, for which reason it was error to overrule certain demurrers to count 2 of the petition; and also error, as assigned in the 3rd special ground of the amended motion for new trial, to charge the jury that, in substance, the plaintiff alleges that the defendant was substantially benefited by carrying her to the doctor (which was the errand on which the women were engaged at the time of the collision), and owed her a duty to exercise ordinary care; and that, should the jury find from the evidence that the defendant received benefits substantial to herself by so doing, then they would apply the rule as to ordinary care which he then gave them in charge.
We think that these contentions are well taken. The rule, of course, is that a guest is a person gratuitously riding for his own benefit, whereas an invitee, to whom the duty of exercising ordinary care, as distinguished from slight diligence only, is owed, is one “whose presence in . . . the automobile is by invitation of the owner for the purpose of conferring some substantial benefit upon his host, that is, something more than merely affording him the pleasure of his company.”
Nash
v.
Reed,
81
Ga. App.
473 (
It follows that the evidence in the case, which substantially supported the allegations of the petition as hereinabove set out, did not authorize a general verdict for the plaintiff. In
Flint Explosive Co.
v.
Edwards,
86
Ga. App.
404 (2) (
Special grounds 1 and 2 complain of alleged errors in the charge which are not likely to recur, and are not specifically passed upon. The error assigned in the first special ground, to the effect that the court’s language might have confused the jury into believing that gross negligence was the same as slight diligence, rather than the absence of slight diligence, was undoubtedly inadvertent and may have been cured by other portions of the charge. Special ground 2, further, is not so complete within itself as to require consideration by this court, in that the evidence referred to therein is not incorporated in this ground of the motion.
Although the riding of the trial court was proper on the general demurrers to both counts of the petition, the trial judge erred in his ruling on certain of the special demurrers to count 2 of the petition, which in effect called on the court to construe it as a gross-negligence count instead of an ordinary-negligence count, as set forth in the first division hereof. Had the court done so and held count 2 to be a gross-negligence count, the subsequent error in the charge, submitting ordinary negligence to the jury, would not have occurred. This error having been assigned in the amended motion for new trial, the denial of such motion was also error. These errors require a reversal.
Judgment reversed.
