1. The defendant objects to the trial court’s allowance of plaintiffs post-pretrial conference amendment to his complaint alleging that the defendant had acted in bad faith, had been stubbornly litigious and had caused the plaintiff unnecessary trouble and expense. Code Ann. § 81A-115 (a) provides that a pleading may be amended as a matter of course and without leave of court at any time before the entry of a pre-trial order; thereafter, an amendment requires leave of court or written consent of the adverse party. Code Ann. § 81A-116 (2) notes that one of the considerations to be weighed at the pre-trial conference is the necessity or desirability of amendments to the pleadings. The plaintiff argues that no pre-trial order was ever signed, that it was therefore never entered, and that he was free to amend his complaint; no pre-trial order, signed or unsigned, appears in the record. The trial judge recalled discussing the amendment prior to the pre-trial conference and noted, "Well, I would have allowed it and I will allow it.” Therefore, if there were no entry of a pre-trial order, the amendment was proper as a matter of course, even though offered after the pre-trial conference; it is the entry of the order and not the conference which is determinative. Code Ann. § 81A-115 (a). If in fact such an order were entered by the trial judge, he clearly gave through his language quoted above, leave to so amend. There was no error.
Western & A. R. Co. v. Smith,
2. The defendant urges error was committed when the trial judge charged on attorney fees, in thát it was not warranted by the evidence. Code § 20-1404 permits the award of attorney fees if the defendant has acted in bad faith, or has been stubbornly litigious, or has caused the plaintiff unnecessary trouble and expense. It is only necessary to the plaintiffs recovery that he show any one of these three conditions exists.
Employers Liab. Assur. Corp. v. Sheftall,
3. Having determined that the plaintiffs procedure for obtaining attorney fees was correct and that the
*397
evidence supports a finding that such an award could be made, we turn to the more difficult question of whether the plaintiffs method of proving the amount of attorney fees was proper. The defendant objects to the expert witness offered by the plaintiff who testified as to the value of attorney fees, arguing that no proper foundation had been laid for the hypothetical question as presented. Code § 38-1710 provides that opinions of experts may be given on the facts as proved by other witnesses; the record here shows no witnesses, prior to the opinion testimony, upon whose testimony the hypothetical question was based, but rather the plaintiffs counsel supplied a rundown on the history of the litigation and asked for an opinion on reasonable fees. The opinion of an expert witness may be given in response to a hypothetical question based upon facts placed in evidence by the testimony of other witnesses or by competent evidence of any nature.
Mutual Benefit Health &c. Assn. v. Hickman,
The plaintiffs attorney in this case asked the following hypothetical question: "Mr. Royal, this is a suit by Joe Earl Godwin against Altamaha Convalescent Center for an alleged indebtedness owed by the Convalescent Center in the sum of Twenty-Five Thousand Dollars, plus interest at the rate of eight percent per annum to Mr. Joe Earl Godwin, which the Altamaha Convalescent Center has failed and refused to pay. A suit was filed in this case, and various motions and so forth were made. On January 4th, 1973, we had a hearing here before Judge Knox, and certain rulings were made, and subsequent thereto the case was appealed, and ended up in the Supreme Court of Georgia. Briefs were prepared and filed. There were — a hearing was had in the Court of Appeals. I mean in the Supreme Court, and the case was returned to this Court. Subsequent thereto, several other motions were filed prohibiting the alleged transfer of certain assets of the corporation. After that there have been numerous conferences with Mr. Godwin and the witnesses of the corporation, one which entailed one trip to Savannah, Georgia, and preparing affidavits and so forth. There was a motion for summary judgment filed in behalf of the corporation which was heard by the Court and ruled upon. Subsequent thereto, the case was set down for a hearing and a pretrial conference was held with Judge Knox, and pretrial orders were prepared, with all the preparation of charges and so forth. Then after that it was necessary, of course, to make preparations for the trial, and an amendment was filed, and then we come down to the going into the matter of jury selection, and selecting a jury, and trying the case. Now, based on your experience as an attorney, do you have an opinion as to what the value of a suit of this sort, a collection suit, what the reasonable attorney fees should be. . .”
The defendant objected to this question as including work that was done in regard to things out of this case entirely. We agree. This case was originally brought by the plaintiff against both as individual defendant and a corporate defendant. The appeal which the plaintiffs attorney alluded to in his hypothetical question was actually brought by the plaintiff himself and involved
*399
issues solely involving the individual defendant. The only connection of the corporate defendant to this appeal was a cross appeal, not a direct appeal. How can the defendant be found guilty of stubborn litigiousness or causing unnecessary trouble and expense when this appeal was the result of the plaintiffs action and dealt with a codefendant? The plaintiff eventually' voluntarily dismissed his action against the individual defendant."... [S]o much of said attorney’s fees as constituted actual damage or injury and are 'reasonable expenses’ of the
present
damage
suit
may be recovered upon proper proof to the satisfaction of the jury.”
Talmadge v. McDonald,
The hypothetical question as framed included elements which were outside the "present suit” and which would not be elements for which attorney fees are recoverable. There was thus no proper foundation for the opinion of the expert as to reasonable fees. It was error to overrule the defendant’s objection to the question.
Judgment reversed.
