1. The plaintiff in this case was standing either on or slightly to the defendant's right of the center line of Broad Street in the City of Augusta, waiting for eastbound traffic to clear so that he could continue across the street, at about 7 a.m. on a December morning when most cars were still driving with lights, when he was struck by the defendant who had made a right turn into Broad Street at an intersection some hundred feet away from the point of impact. The intersection had a traffic light and marked crosswalks; there was no crosswalk at the place the plaintiff was crossing, which was at the foot of a bridge opposite a mill, and the plaintiff’s action was in violation of a subsisting Augusta ordinance introduced in evidence and requiring pedestrians not crossing at crosswalks to yield the right of way to vehicular traffic on the roadway. Under these circumstances it was error to charge the jury that “a pedestrian and a person with an automobile have each the right to use the public highway, but
the right of an operator of an automobile upon the highway is not superior to the right of a pedestrian,
and it is the duty of each to exercise his right with due regard to the corresponding rights of the other. The driver of an automobile is bound to use reasonable care to anticipate the presence on the streets of other persons having equal rights with himself to be there.” “[A]n ordinance fixing reasonable rules and regulations for the use of city streets is applicable to all pedestrians, as otherwise motorists would always travel the streets
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at their peril.”
Russell v. Corley,
2. “There [is] no error in refusing to admit evidence of a customary or habitual violation of the law by others as a basis and reason for the violation by plaintiff. If such were permissible then defendant might well have offered to show that people who drive vehicles along this street do so at speeds in excess of that allowed by law as an excuse for his violation on this occasion.”
Etheridge v. Hooper,
3. “Without offering the same in evidence, either party may avail himself of allegations or admissions made in the pleading of the other.”
Code
§ 38-402. Where the pleading is inconsistent, the admission, not the denial, prevails.
City of Moultrie v. Schofield’s Sons Co.,
4. The remaining enumerations of error are without merit;
Judgment reversed.
