An elderly couple from Birmingham travelling to Pembrokeshire to visit a family member, died from multiple injuries as a result of a collision when attempting to overtake on the A477, near Llanteg, an inquest in Milford Haven heard last week. The accident occurred on the afternoon of Thursday, June 14, when a Skoda Fabia, driven by 89-year-old George Edwin James Dunn, of Solihull, collided with another car after overtaking an articulated lorry. Mr. Dunn was accompanied by his wife, 90-year- old Phyllis Evelyn Dunn and son Michael, who was sat alongside him in the passenger seat. Mr. and Mrs. Dunn, who were returning to the area where they once honeymooned and visited regularly, died within 10 minutes of each other at Swansea's Morriston Hospital during the early hours of the following morning. Pembrokeshire coroner, Mr. Michael Howells, heard from the couple's son Michael how his father had 'somewhat aggressive driving tendencies'. Coroner's officer, Jeremy Davies, also reported that Mr. Dunn's family had said that the 89-year-old could sometimes 'act erratically behind the wheel'. He had been off the road for a short time after a mini-stroke, but was later declared fit to drive. "My only concern was that my father was driving a little fast," said Michael Dunn, who said he could see the other car approaching as his father overtook the lorry. The other driver involved, David Kenneth Hughes, of Hereford, said he braked when he realised the car coming towards his Rover 45 was not going to pull in. He, his wife and mother received treatment for their injuries. Police accident investigator PC Richard Jessop explained that locked wheel marks 54 feet long on the road showed that Mr. Dunn's car braked before impact, as did Mr. Hughes, with the impact speed being between 50 and 75 mph.