Etheridge v. Guest

12 S.E.2d 483, 63 Ga. App. 637, 1940 Ga. App. LEXIS 513
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 14, 1940
Docket28369.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 12 S.E.2d 483 (Etheridge v. Guest) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Etheridge v. Guest, 12 S.E.2d 483, 63 Ga. App. 637, 1940 Ga. App. LEXIS 513 (Ga. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinions

Sutton, J.

L. E. Etheridge brought suit against Jack Guest, to recover damages for injuries sustained in an automobile collision. It was alleged, that while the plaintiff was driving an automobile along the public highway between Dacula and Winder, Georgia, on the night of November 26, 1938, and was on the right side of the road, traveling about thirty miles an hour, his automobile was run into .by the defendant’s automobile while operated by the latter’s agent and servant at the unlawful rate of fifty miles an hour, and the plaintiff was thereby injured and damaged in described particulars; that the defendant’s car was being driven on the left side of the road, in violation of the law of Georgia, and came into view suddenly and without any warning to the plaintiff; that the defendant was negligent in operating the said automobile on the left side of the highway, in driving the same into the car in *638 which the plaintiff was riding, in operating it at a high, rapid, and unlawful rate of speed in violation of the law of Georgia, in failing to have it under control as he approached the top of the hill down which the plaintiff was descending, in not stopping, and in driving the automobile into the car occupied by the plaintiff.

The defendant filed an answer denying the substantial allegations of the petition, and by cross-action sought to recover damages from the plaintiff; alleging that at the time and place the plaintiff was driving his car at fifty miles an hour, zigzagging across the highway, and ran into the automobile operated by the defendant’s agent, injuring and damaging the defendant and his car in respects set forth; that the plaintiff was intoxicated, driving without a license from the State, and while intoxicated, and zigzagging on the public highway, and finally striking the defendant’s automobile; and that he was violating the law of this State in driving on the wrong side of the road at fifty miles an hour. The jury returned a verdict for the defendant, without awarding him any damages on the cross-action. The exception is to the judgment overruling the plaintiff’s motion for new trial.

The evidence was voluminous and conflicting, but from it the jury was authorized to return the verdict in favor of the defendant. The plaintiff, corroborated by his companion in the car driven by him, testified that he was driving on the right side of the highway about thirty miles an hour, and that the defendant’s car, driven by another at his request (as shown by the evidence), and following several cars, suddenly turned out from the line of traffic, throwing the lights of the car into the face of the plaintiff, and ran into the plaintiff’s automobile before he could avoid it. There was testimony on behalf of the defendant which authorized the jury to find that the plaintiff was driving down a slight incline in the middle of the highway, just before the collision, between eight and nine o’clock at night; that upon the approach of the defendant’s automobile from the other direction the plaintiff sought to drive his car to its proper position on the right side of the highway but went too far on the right shoulder of the road, and in attempting to pull back to a proper position on the highway, and striking a concrete drain on the edge thereof, he drove his car or allowed it to pass beyond the center of the highway, striking the defendant’s automobile on its left-front side and knocking it against *639 the guard-rail on the defendant’s side of the road. There was testimony on behalf of the defendant, that his ear was at all times on the right side of the road, and that it was found shortly after the collision with its right wheels against or straddling the guardrail, and tilted slightly to the left. Its left front and the left front of the plaintiff’s car were damaged. - There was testimony as to certain physical facts, such as skid marks which were attributed to the passing of the plaintiff’s car from the right side of the road beyond the center line; and it was testified by a witness for the defendant, a mechanic, who reached the scene shortly after the collision, that the rear end of the motor in the plaintiff’s car had become dislodged; that according to a mark made on the pavement it had struck the pavement at a point about two feet from the center of the highway on the plaintiff’s side of the road, leaving a line parallel to the other skid marks mentioned; and that the front of the car, being from five to six feet from the rear end of the motor, had necessarily extended beyond the center line of the highway at the time of the collision, if the car cut across the highway diagonally. Because of the physical evidence above mentioned, it is contended by the defendant that the testimony of the plaintiff and his companion that the plaintiff’s car never left the right side of the highway, but that the defendant’s car came over to his side and crashed into the plaintiff’s car, should be disregarded. While this court can not say that the physical facts demand a finding, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff’s car passed beyond the center line of the highway, they are consistent with the direct testimony of the defendant’s witnesses that it did crash into the defendant’s automobile while it was traveling on its proper side. It would require unnecessary and unprofitable elaboration to reinforce our conclusion by a detailed analysis of the facts adduced at the trial, and about which much argument is made in the briefs of counsel. We think that what is said above is sufficient to demonstrate that the verdict was authorized, and that the court did not err in overruling the general grounds of the motion for new trial.

The first special ground complains that the court erred in charging the jury that it was unlawful to operate an automobile upon the highways without a driver’s license, and that if the plaintiff was so operating his car at the time of the collision it would be negligence per se; and that the charge was given in such a way as *640 to be applicable as part of the law of the whole case, including the plaintiff’s action, inasmuch as the court charged that the plaintiff could not recover if guilty of negligence equal to or greater than that of the defendant; and because the court did not charge that the alleged negligence could not be considered unless there was some causal connection between it and the injury. The majority opinion of the court in respect to this ground, from which I dissent for reasons shown in my dissenting opinion, is as follows: Before an act can be considered as negligence it must be in violation of some duty owing, under the circumstances, by the person committing the act to another person, and in its nature must be capable of having a causal connection between it and the damage or injury inflicted upon the other person. An act prohibited by a penal statute, and which might be negligence as a matter of law, is not negligence unless its commission is in violation of some duty owing, under the circumstances, by the person committing the act to another person, and is capable of having a causal connection with the injury inflicted. See 45 C. J. 631, 720. A violation of the law by a person in operating a motor vehicle along a public highway, without having obtained a driver’s license as required by law, is in violation of no duty owing by such person to another person on the highway; and such an act can have m> causal connection with an injury or damage sustained by' the other person.

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.E.2d 483, 63 Ga. App. 637, 1940 Ga. App. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/etheridge-v-guest-gactapp-1940.