Fender v. Drost

7 S.E.2d 800, 62 Ga. App. 345, 1940 Ga. App. LEXIS 656
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 29, 1940
Docket28080.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 7 S.E.2d 800 (Fender v. Drost) 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
Fender v. Drost, 7 S.E.2d 800, 62 Ga. App. 345, 1940 Ga. App. LEXIS 656 (Ga. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Stephens, P. J.

George Drost brought suit against Ralph Fender to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained as a result of the negligence of the defendant. The plaintiff alleged that on the evening of November 19, 1938, he was a deputy sheriff of Richmond County and it became his duty to patrol the Milledgeville road, a State and Federal-aid highway in that county; that this road is paved with concrete a width of eighteen feet, with top-soil shoulders on each side of the pavement approximately six feet wide; that around 8:55 p. m. on that date the plaintiff received an official radio call directing him to go to a point on that highway about ten miles from the city limits of Augusta and investigate an automobile wreck; that the plaintiff and one Ridgeley proceeded to this point on the Milledgeville road where they found that an automobile being driven in an easterly *347 direction had skidded off the south side of the highway; that the plaintiff stopped his automobile opposite to the place where the automobile had skidded in the highway, discharged deputy sheriff Eidgeley so that he could prevent congestion of traffic, and then proceeded a short distance, approximately one hundred feet, westerly, and pulled off the pavement, parked his automobile on the top-soil shoulder off to the north of the highway approximately seven feet from the center thereof, and then went back towards the wreck; that when he reached the wreck he found that the defendant had arrived with his wrecker, turned it around and pulled the wrecked automobile out of the ditch and up on the shoulder of the highway, and the defendant was in the highway, approximately seven feet from the center with his wrecker and adjusting the “grappling to the wrecked ear;” that the plaintiff upon finding that the defendant had gotten the wrecked car back upon the shoulder of the highway and was placing the wrecker in the highway with the view to jacking up the wrecked car, turned back and across from the direction of the south side of the highway and started to his automobile which was parked on the north shoulder and off the pavement, and'when the plaintiff had reached the edge of the pavement, and approximately sixty feet from where his car was parked on the north side of the highway, he looked up the highway and saw a truck approaching about seventy feet up the road from him and from the direction in which the truck was headed; that it appeared to him that the truck was bearing down upon him, and he began to run from the pavement across to the shoulder approximately ten feet down towards the ditch, but he had made only a few steps before the truck was all but upon him and on the shoulder, and the plaintiff thereupon sought to spring from the shoulder across the ditch on the north side of the highway, and while in the act of so doing he was struck by the front of the truck; that the truck passed on and ran into his automobile just a few feet beyond the shoulder off the pavement on the right or north side of the highway.

It was further alleged, that the defendant’s wrecker was parked on the pavement on the south side of the highway with two electric headlights shining “with dazzling and glaring rays blinding the driver of the oncoming truck” which was approaching from the east; that the defendant, “in addition to having the two powerful *348 electric headlights with dazzling and glaring and blinding rays down said highway, had a high-powered spot light which also was dazzling and glaring with blinding rays down said highway directly in the face of the driver of the oncoming truck, further blinding him;” that from where the defendant’s wrecker was parked in the highway there is an upgrade “eastward towards Augusta,” of approximately seven and one-half degrees, and that some sixty yards therefrom in the same direction the highway turns suddenly at “right angles from a southwesterly direction in a westerly direction,” so that from the crest of the hill “was a straightaway up which said three powerful, dazzling and glaring headlights shone,” blinding the driver of the truck, and “incapacitating him and making him unable to see” the plaintiff’s position of peril “on the shoulder of said highway endeavoring to escape the danger from the oncoming truck;” that there was attached to this truck a trailer loaded with mules, and when Brown came upon this “straightaway, up which” such lights from the “defendant’s wrecker were shining,” he was blinded and unable to see down the highway, and so sought to pull to the right of the road, and applied his brakes so as to bring his truck to a stop, but before the truck was stopped it struck plaintiff inflicting the injuries sued for; that the plaintiff was at his post of duty as a deputy sheriff, and in the exercise of all ordinary care and diligence, and engaged in an effort to prevent any one from being injured by the blocking of the road or by passing automobiles and other traffic at this point, at the time he was injured, all of which was known to the defendant; that the defendant had knowledge of the plaintiff’s dangerous and perilous situation, and knew that a failure on his part to dim the headlights of his wrecker would blind an approaching driver of another vehicle to such an extent as to prevent him from seeing the plaintiff; that the “bright, dazzling and glaring lights of defendant’s wrecker did blind” Brown and prevented him from seeing the plaintiff, and caused him to drive his truck into the plaintiff; that the defendant’s failure to dim the lights on the wrecker, and parking it as he did, were the efficient proximate causes of plaintiff’s injuries; that the defendant’s failure to dim such lights was the sole proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries, and the defendant knew that the failure to dim the lights “was calculated to bring about such a dangerous situation with reference to petitioner as would *349 naturally result in his injury and actually resulted” in the plaintiff being injured; that at the time and place the plaintiff was in the exercise of all due care and caution, and could not have avoided his injuries by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence; that Brown, the driver of the approaching truck which struck the plaintiff, was at the time and place in question in the exercise of all ordinary care and diligence, and that the plaintiff’s injuries resulted solely from the carelessness and negligence of the defendant as stated.

The defendant demurred to the petition on the ground that no cause of action was set forth against him, because it was not alleged that the defendant had violated any duty owed to the plaintiff, because it affirmatively appeared from the petition “that the proximate cause of said collision was not the alleged negligence of this defendant,” because it affirmatively appeared from the petition “that the proximate cause of said casualty was the negligence of Thomas Brown, and because the petition affirmatively showed that the proximate cause of the casualty was the negligence of plaintiff.” The defendant also demurred on various special grounds, and the material defects in the petition so pointed out were cured by amendment. The judge overruled the demurrer “on each and every ground thereof.” The defendant excepted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 S.E.2d 800, 62 Ga. App. 345, 1940 Ga. App. LEXIS 656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fender-v-drost-gactapp-1940.