For the sake of convenience we shall refer to the plaintiff in error, Mrs. Branan, as the plaintiff, and to LaGrange Truck Lines, Inc., and Marvin Clayton as the defendants.
The sole question for consideration by this court is whether the judgment of the trial court directing a verdict for the defendants should be affirmed or reversed.
The petition as finally amended set forth a cause of action against the defendants for injuries to the plaintiff's person and damage to her property by the commission of specified acts of negligence on the part of the defendant Clayton whose negligence was imputable to the defendant LaGrange Truck Lines, Inc.
The allegations of the petition went further than setting out the cause of action upon which the plaintiff relied for recovery, and undertook to anticipate and avoid the defense that the defendants’ liability had been extinguished by a settlement between the parties, effected by the plaintiff’s signing a release of liability and accepting a draft in satisfaction of her claim for damages.
The rule is well established that, except in cases brought by a railroad employee for injuries caused by the negligence of a fellow servant, the plaintiff is not required to anticipate and negative possible defenses that may be urged.
Roadway Express, Inc.,
v.
Jackson,
77
Ga. App.
341 (2) (
The petition was demurred to on several grounds. Each of them is bottomed on the proposition that the petition was insufficient to set forth a cause of action, or failed to negative the defense it anticipated. These matters were decided adversely to the defendants by the judgment overruling their demurrers, to which judgment no exception was taken. The judgment became the law of the case.
McKenzie
v.
Perdue,
67
Ga. App.
202, 212 (
All, then, that remained for the plaintiff to do in order to be entitled to recover was to prove the allegations of the petition.
Pierpont Mfg. Co.
v.
Mayor
&c.
of Savannah,
153
Ga.
455 (1, 2) (
The defendants invoke the rule that a party testifying in his own behalf, if there are material conflicts in his testimony, is not entitled to recover unless that testimony least favorable to his contention is of such character as to authorize recovery.
Clark
v.
Calhoun Nat. Bank,
53
Ga. App.
691, 694 (
The evidence presented by the plaintiff was not self-contradictory or equivocal so as to require it to be construed most strongly against her. The depositions referred to in the opinion were taken prior to the trial of the case and although they might tend to impeach the plaintiff’s testimony they would not have the effect of requiring, as a matter of law, that her testimony be disregarded.
See Swift & Co. v. Hall,
94
Ga. App.
239 (
Moreover, in view of the plaintiff’s testimony that she was in such pain at the time the “release” was signed that she didn’t remember signing it and the only reason she knew she signed it was that her husband told her she did would have authorized the jury to find for the plaintiff as to the anticipated defense pleaded by her.
The plaintiff’s testimony, while containing some inconsistencies, was, as a whole, plain, plausible and consistent. We have not overlooked some inconsistencies, most of which were minor for the most part and did not concern material matters. But despite the discrepancies referred to, the plaintiff’s testimony as a whole was understandable and did not present conflicting ver *847 sions of the manner in which she was injured or repugnant accounts of the representations made by the claims adjuster to induce her to sign the release and take the draft tendered by him into her physical possession.
The rule of practice announced in the Clark case, supra, and in many other cases, like all other matters of procedure, must be given reasonable construction and practical application. The mere fact that the party’s testimony is inconsistent and contradictory in reference to vital issues does not necessarily divest it of probative value. The rule is applicable only when the party’s testimony presents such contrary and repugnant accounts of the same matter that to accept the'one as true compels the rejection of the other as false. And even then, if the party witness’s testimony least favorable to his case supports the cause of action as laid in the petition, it is not as a matter of law precluded from prevailing in the case. The question of weight and credit to be given his evidence is for the jury.
It is not necessary, but perhaps well, to observe that the plaintiff was a very old lady, four score or more years old. The same precision of judgment and clarity of memory, however, which would normally be expected of younger persons could hardly have been required of her. Age takes its toll of physical and mental strength and casts its long shadows across the way of memory. She was easily confused as to details, but testified with remarkable clarity for one so old. As authority for the proposition that her age and mental state should be considered, see
Central of Ga. R. Co. v. Poole,
25
Ga. App.
58 (2) (
It must also be considered that the plaintiff explained the failure of her testimony when examined on the trial to coincide in detail with that given by her when examined by depositions on May 12, 1954. She explained that she was in great pain when her depositions were taken and scarcely knew what was transpiring; whereas not being in such stress at the time of the trial neaiiy two years later, her memory was clearer. She also stated that when her depositions were taken her attention was not directed to, nor was she examined as to, her transactions with the claims adjuster. In the case of
Central of Ga. R. Co.
v.
Poole,
supra, (headnote 2) it was held: “While it is a well-settled rule
*848
that where the evidence of a plaintiff or a defendant is contradictory within itself, vague, or equivocal, it must be construed most strongly against him
(Watkins
v.
Woodbery,
24
Ga. App.
80,
*849 The trial judge erred in directing the verdict in favor of the defendants.
Headnotes 5 and 6 need no1 elaboration.
Judgment reversed.
