Stroud v. Doolittle

96 S.E.2d 876, 213 Ga. 32, 1957 Ga. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 12, 1957
Docket19553, 19554
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 96 S.E.2d 876 (Stroud v. Doolittle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stroud v. Doolittle, 96 S.E.2d 876, 213 Ga. 32, 1957 Ga. LEXIS 289 (Ga. 1957).

Opinion

Candler, Justice.

The writs of error which were sued out in this litigation to the Court of Appeals, assign error on judgments overruling separate general demurrers interposed to the petition. On consideration of the writs, and while sitting as a body for the *33 determination of the questions presented by them, Judges Nichols, Townsend, and Quillian were of the opinion that the judgments complained of should be affirmed, Chief Judge Felton, Presiding Judge Gardner, and Judge Carlisle were of the opinion that they should be reversed; and because of such equal division, the writs of error were transferred to this court for decision under article 6, section 2, paragraph 4, of the Constitution of 1945.

This litigation arose when C. B. Doolittle filed a suit for damages in the Superior Court of Clarke County against George Stroud, a resident of Clarke County, Georgia, and Mary Joel Williams, a resident of Dodge County, Georgia. Briefly and so far as need be stated, the petition alleges: On November 29, 1954, at about 8:15 a.m., the plaintiff was driving his Chevrolet pickup truck north on State highway No. 15 between Watkinsville and Athens, the paved part of which highway is 21 feet wide. He met a school bus, which the defendant Stroud was driving. The defendant Stroud gave the required signal for vehicular travel to stop while he was picking up some school children. In obedience to the signal given and as required by law, the plaintiff immediately stopped his truck in the lane of the highway he was rightfully using, and the defendant Stroud stopped his school bus in the opposite lane of the highway, although there was ample room to his right in an area adjacent to the highway for him to easily and safely have driven his bus off the pavement and to a place more than 12 feet from the center line of the highway. While the plaintiff’s truck and the defendant Stroud’s school bus were so stopped on the highway, and while school children were being received on the bus, the defendant Williams came up behind the plaintiff’s truck in a Ford automobile at a rate of speed in excess of 60 miles per hour. Although she could see the plaintiff’s parked truck and the defendant Stroud’s parked school bus while several hundred feet away from them, she nevertheless continued to drive her automobile at the same excessive rate of speed and did not apply her brakes until it was too late for her to stop. Her automobile struck the rear part of the plaintiff's truck, knocked it off the highway and down an embankment with great force, and her automobile continued to travel until it passed to the rear of the school bus and ran off the highway to her left. In consequence of the collision, the plaintiff sus *34 tained severe personal injuries and his truck was badly damaged. The defendant Stroud was negligent, in stopping his school bus for the purpose of picking up school children (1) at a place within 12 feet of the center line of the highway; (2) at a point on the highway which prevented free passage of other vehicles; and (3) when he observed the defendant Williams’ automobile approaching him from an opposite direction. The defendant Williams was negligent, (1) in operating her automobile at a rate of speed in excess of 60 miles per hour; and (2) in failing to stop her automobile before overtaking and striking the plaintiff’s truck, which had stopped on the highway as required by and in obedience to law. The joint and concurrent acts of negligence so committed by the defendants were the direct and proximate cause of the personal injuries and property damage the plaintiff sustained. The defendants demurred to the petition on the following general grounds: 1. It shows on its face that the plaintiff’s personal injuries and property damage resulted directly from his failure to exercise ordinary care for the safety of his person and property. 2. It fails to state a cause of action for the relief sought.

Section 92 of the Uniform Act Regulating Traffic on Highways, which the legislature passed in 1953 (Ga. L. 1953, Nov.-Dec. Sess., pp. 556, 598; Code, Ann. Supp., § 68-1670), reads in part as follows: “No person shall stop, stand, or park a vehicle, except when necessary to avoid conflict with other traffic or in compliance with law or the directions, of a police officer or traffic-control device, in any of the following places: . . . 15. It shall be unlawful for any person to stop or park any automobile, truck, tractor, trailer, or other motor vehicle . . . on or along any State-aid road or highway, unless such vehicle be placed so that it is at least 12 feet removed from the center line of such State-aid road or highway; and such vehicle shall be so parked that no portion thereof shall be within 12 feet of the center line of such State-aid road or highway.” And section 89 (Code, Ann. Supp., § 68-1667) of the act is in part as follows: “ (a) The driver of a vehicle upon a highway upon meeting or overtaking from either direction any school bus which has stopped on the highway for the purpose of receiving or discharging any school children shall stop the vehicle before reach *35 ing such school bus and shall not proceed until such school bus resumes motion, or until signaled by the driver to proceed, (b) Every bus used for the transportation of school children shall bear upon the front and rear thereon a plainly visible sign containing the words ‘School Bus’ in letters not less than eight inches in height. ... (d) It shall be unlawful to operate any flashing warning signal light on any school bus except when any said school bus is stopped ... on a highway for the purpose of permitting school children to board or alight from said school bus.”

In this case the allegations of the petition affirmatively show that the plaintiff at about 8:15 a.m. on meeting a school bus which had stopped on the highway for the purpose of receiving school children stopped his truck as required by and in obedience to law and in the lane of the highway he had a right to use, and when, as the petition alleges, the defendant Williams was driving her automobile “several hundred feet” behind him. Hence, there is clearly no merit in the contention of either defendant that the petition shows on its face that the plaintiff’s personal injuries and property damage resulted directly from his failure to use ordinary care for the safety of his person and property.

There is no merit in the plaintiff’s contention that the defendant Stroud committed an act of negligence by stopping his school bus at a place on the pavement within 12 feet of the center line of the highway for the purpose of receiving school children, and was therefore, as a joint tortfeasor, liable to him in damages with the defendant Williams for the personal injuries and property damage he sustained from the collision. Unquestionably, that part of section 89 which has been quoted in the preceding division of this opinion accords to school-bus drivers the right to stop their buses on the pavement and within less than 12 feet of the center line of the highway for the purpose of receiving or discharging school children. To hold, as the plaintiff contends, that the above-quoted portion of section 92 of the act is applicable to school buses while being operated for the purpose of receiving or discharging school children would render their operation for such purpose virtually ineffectual.

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Bluebook (online)
96 S.E.2d 876, 213 Ga. 32, 1957 Ga. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stroud-v-doolittle-ga-1957.