Gazaway v. Nicholson

5 S.E.2d 391, 61 Ga. App. 3, 1939 Ga. App. LEXIS 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 21, 1939
Docket27799.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 5 S.E.2d 391 (Gazaway v. Nicholson) 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
Gazaway v. Nicholson, 5 S.E.2d 391, 61 Ga. App. 3, 1939 Ga. App. LEXIS 207 (Ga. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinions

Sutton, J.

Eobert Nicholson, a minor eight years of age, by his father, J. E. Nicholson, as next friend, brought suit against Milton Gaza way, Noah Johnson, Allyn & Bacon Book Publishing Companj', and Parrar W. Bond, to recover damages on account of alleged joint and concurrent negligence of the defendants. In the petition it was alleged as follows: Before and on September 14, 1937, Milton Gazaway owned and operated a bus for the purpose of transporting school children to and from Valley Point Consolidated School in Whitfield County. On September 14, 1937, Noah Johnson was operating and driving this bus at the instance and under the direction of Milton Gazaway, for the purpose for which it was maintained and operated, and was the agent and chauffeur of Gazaway on the date and the occasion of injuring the plaintiff; and all of the acts of negligence by Johnson are charged as acts of negligence of Gazaway. Before and on September 14, 1937, Bond was the agent and alter ego of Allyn & Bacon Book ■ Publishing Company, as traveling representative and within the scope of his authority representing that company, and all of the acts of negligence by Bond are charged as acts of negligence against the company. On September 14, 1937, the plaintiff had attended the school, and had ridden south in the school bus of Gazaway, operated by Johnson, agent, chauffeur, and driver of Gazaway under his direction, and under the duty to transport school children safely from and to their homes and the school. About 1:30 o’clock p. m., the driver stopped the bus, not at the Carbondale road just south of the plaintiff’s home, as was customary and safest, so that the plaintiff would not have to cross the Dixie highway at a point ten miles south of Dalton in said county, but on the left or east side of the said Dixie highway for the purpose of unloading school children, among whom was the plaintiff; and in order for him to get to the home of his father on the west side of the said highway *5 it was necessary for the plaintiff to cross the highway, all of which was well known to the driver of the school bus, who, without accompanying the children, including the plaintiff, so alighting from said bus, allowed them to alight on the road in the most thickly and constantly traveled public highway in the county. The plaintiff alighted from the bus,- and others were alighting therefrom, and plaintiff was attempting to cross the highway, and had passed the center of the highway going to his home on the west side thereof, and was on the west side of the center line of the highway at a point just opposite the home of his father and just south of the intersecting Carbondale road, and at which time the automobile of the defendant publishing company, operated by Bond within the scope of his employment and about the business of his employer, headed north on said highway, crossed the intersecting Carbondale road at a speed of fifty miles and more per hour, and passed said school bus so unloading school children, at said rate of speed, and Bond drove on the left side of the center line of the highway, on the side, and ran said automobile- over the body of plaintiff, inflicting upon him certain described severe, painful, and permanent injuries. The said bus driver remained in his seat, which was high above the road and which gave him a clear vision of automobiles approaching from the south; and while said bus Avas so parked on the left side of the road, discharging school children, including the plaintiff, in violation of the laws of this State, he saw the approaching automobile driven by Bond, and discharged said school children, including the plaintiff, in said highway into the path of the oncoming car of Bond.

Further allegations: The operator of the school bus, being a carrier of passengers for hire, owed to the plaintiff the duty of extraordinary care and diligence in putting him off in a safe place, and was guilty of negligence per se in discharging plaintiff on the left side of the road and highway, and was negligent and careless in discharging him into said thickly traveled highAvay and into the path of the oncoming automobile operated by Bond. At the time of the inflicting of said injuries the plaintiff Avas free from fault, and his injuries were caused solely, directly, and proximately by the joint trespasses and torts of said joint tort-feasors, defendants. The said defendants were joint trespassers and joint tort-feasors and were negligent and care *6 less, as follows: (a) Gazaway was negligent and wanting in ordinary care in permitting Johnson, an unskilled driver, to operate and drive said school bus filled with small school children, (b) Gazaway and his agent Johnson were negligent and wanting in ordinary care in stopping said school bus on the left side of the Dixie highway, a populously traveled highway, on the left side of the road and and just north of an intersecting highway, the Carbondale public road, and unloading small school children, including plaintiff, in said highway without assisting them in getting off of the school bus into a safe place, (c) Said driver of the school bus was negligent in remaining in the bus while letting small school children, including plaintiff, alight into the public highway from the bus. (d)' In not stopping said bus and discharging the school children at a safe point where plaintiff could get to his home without alighting into said populously traveled highway. All of said acts and failures to act, on the part of Johnson and Gazaway, contributed to and constituted joint acts of trespass and joint tortfeasors, which, together with the joint trespasses and joint torts of the joint tort-feasors Allyn & Bacon Book Publishing Company and Bond, contributed to and brought about the injury and damage to plaintiff. The joint trespasses and joint acts of negligence and carelessness on the part of Allyn & Bacon Book Publishing Company and Bond, contributing to said injuries, all of which directly and proximately brought about said damage, were as follows: Allyn & Bacon Book Publishing Company and Bond were negligent and careless, (a) in operating said car at the excessive rate of speed of fifty miles per hour and more, across an intersecting public road which crosses a thickly traveled State road, the Dixie highway; (b) in operating said car by a school bus unloading school children, and in ignoring the word “Stop” in large letters thereon; (c) in operating said car the driver passed the bus without having the car under immediate control; (d) in operating the car on the left side of the center of the highway; (e) in not stopping said car before striking and injuring plaintiff; (f) the driver was negligent per se in passing said bus while it was discharging the school children; all of said acts and failures to act on the part of the defendants constituting joint trespasses and joint torts on plaintiff and bringing about his injuries and damage.

Gazaway and Johnson demurred on the ground that no cause *7 of action was set forth against. them. The demurrer was overruled, and they excepted. They answered, denying the material allegations, and especially pleaded that the bus did not stop on the highway, but was driven to the left thereof and on the grounds of a near-by filling-station at a distance of four feet from the highway; that the child had safely alighted, and the relation of passenger and carrier had terminated before he was injured on the highway; and that his injuries were due solely to the negligence of the driver of the automobile which struck him.

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.E.2d 391, 61 Ga. App. 3, 1939 Ga. App. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gazaway-v-nicholson-gactapp-1939.