Grier v. Williams

24 S.E.2d 509, 68 Ga. App. 863, 1943 Ga. App. LEXIS 387
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 22, 1943
Docket29767.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 24 S.E.2d 509 (Grier v. Williams) 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
Grier v. Williams, 24 S.E.2d 509, 68 Ga. App. 863, 1943 Ga. App. LEXIS 387 (Ga. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

To be good, a petition seeking recovery of damages for injuries on account of the negligence of another must allege facts which constitute a continuous succession of events, so linked together as to make a natural whole. If from the petition there appears some new and independent cause, intervening between the alleged wrong and the injury, the petition is bad and will be stricken on general demurrer. For in such event the intervening agency is the direct and proximate cause of the injury and the first event, though wrong, is too remote.

DECIDED JANUARY 22, 1943. REHEARING DENIED FEBRUARY 25, 1943.
Mrs. Virginia A. Williams sued Thomas Grier and the Columbia Baking Company for damages resulting from the negligence of defendants. The first four paragraphs of the petition allege that Thomas Grier resides in Emanuel County and that Columbia Baking Company is a foreign corporation with its principal office in Fulton County, Georgia; that Green and Church Streets are paved streets in the City of Swainsboro, Georgia: that defendants have damaged plaintiff in the sum of $15,000: that on the afternoon of May 25, 1941, plaintiff was riding on the rear seat of a Dodge automobile then being driven by her son in an easterly direction on Church Street in Swainsboro; that the automobile was not owned by the plaintiff, nor was it in her custody or possession at the time of the injury.

The petition further alleges: Paragraph 5: "That plaintiff's said son completely stopped said automobile being so driven by him at said time and place at the intersection of Church and Green Streets in said City of Swainsboro. Georgia, in obedience to a stop sign located on said Church Street at or near the westerly side of said Green Street. That after her said son had so stopped said automobile and had looked out for on-coming vehicles and traffic in each direction at said street intersection. and his pathway across said Green Street. That after her said son had so stopped said automobile and had looked out for on-coming vehicles and traffic in each direction at said street intersection, and his pathway across said Green Street appearing to be clear, with no traffic approaching to his right or left, he drove and moved said Dodge automobile in which plaintiff was riding as aforesaid forward into said street intersection, and as it was crossing said Green Street another automobile driven by a negro in a northerly direction on said Green Street at a very high rate of speed collided with and struck with terrific force said Dodge automobile driven by plaintiff's son *Page 864 as aforesaid, greatly damaging and practically demolishing said Dodge automobile, and as a result thereof, plaintiff was painfully, seriously and permanently injured in and about her head, body and limbs, and she sustained therefrom many severe wounds, bruises and injuries, and has suffered and will continue to suffer permanently great pain and anguish, and immediately after plaintiff so receiving and sustaining said injuries therefrom, she was carried to a hospital and was compelled to be confined in said hospital for several weeks for treatment of her said injuries and wounds. That said collision also resulted in injuries of a serious nature to your plaintiff's said son, her son's wife, and to plaintiff's husband, all of whom were also riding in said Dodge automobile at said time and place, and said injuries to plaintiff's husband resulting in his death within a few days after said collision.

"6. That said defendant at the time of said collision carelessly and negligently had a large bakery motor truck parked and stored at the westerly curb on said Green Street, at or near the intersection of said Green and Church Streets, in said City of Swainsboro, Georgia, with the front end pointed north, and in such a position, location and manner so that said bakery motor truck did then and there obscure the view of plaintiff and of her said son looking in a southerly direction and to his right along said Green Street at the time he stopped said Dodge automobile in obedience to said stop sign at said intersection. That said Green Street was not a one-way street. That at the time of said collision said bakery motor truck so negligently and carelessly stored and parked as aforesaid was owned by the defendant, Columbia Baking Company, a corporation, and was in the control, custody, and possession of its servant and employee, the defendant, Thomas Grier, also known as T. F. Grier, with the consent, knowledge, and acquiesence of the defendant, Columbia Baking Company, a corporation, and said bakery motor truck was parked and stored as aforesaid by said defendant, Thomas Grier, also known as T. F. Grier, in the course of his duties in and about his employment by said defendant, Columbia Baking Company, a corporation.

"7. That said bakery motor truck was parked and stored aforesaid prior to and at the time of said collision in violation of the city ordinances of the said City of Swainsboro, Georgia. That said bakery motor truck was parked and stored as aforesaid on the night *Page 865 immediately prior to the date of said collision and was carelessly and negligently allowed to remain by said defendants so parked and stored from that time until and after said collision in violation of said city ordinances of said City of Swainsboro, Georgia.

"8. That said defendants had habitually, for several months prior to said collision, been parking and storing said bakery motor truck in said place on Green Street carelessly and negligently in violation of said city ordinances of the City of Swainsboro, Georgia, as aforesaid.

"9. That said habitual careless and negligent parking and storing of said bakery motor truck on said Green Street at said street intersection as aforesaid obstructed the view of the travelling public on Green and Church Streets in said City of Swainsboro, Georgia, which said streets were at time of said collision heavily used by the travelling public day and night at time of said collision, motor vehicles travelled frequently at high rates of speed at said place on said Green Street, and such parking and storing of said bakery motor truck at said place created a traffic hazard and a death trap which was well known to said defendants, or by the exercise of due prudence and care should have been well known to said defendants.

"10. That said bakery motor truck so parked and stored on said street as aforesaid was not placed in any designated painted diagrams as required by the city ordinances of the City of Swainsboro, Georgia, and particularly as required by one of such ordinances appearing as § 239 of the City Code of the City of Swainsboro, Georgia, which will be more fully alleged hereinafter.

"11. That the careless and negligent parking and storing of said bakery motor truck by said defendants as aforesaid was the proximate cause of said collision and of said injuries to plaintiff. That such parked and stored bakery motor truck obstructed the view of plaintiff and the driver of said Dodge automobile in which plaintiff was riding at said time and place, and also obstructed the [view] of said negro driver of the automobile which collided with said Dodge automobile in which plaintiff was riding as aforesaid, and if said parked and stored bakery truck had been parked and stored elsewhere than at the place aforesaid, and not in violation of said city ordinances, the drivers of said automobiles so collided as aforesaid would have had a sufficiently clear view of *Page 866 approaching traffic at said street intersection to have avoided said collision, said collision would not have occurred, and plaintiff would not have sustained her said injuries."

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.E.2d 509, 68 Ga. App. 863, 1943 Ga. App. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grier-v-williams-gactapp-1943.