31 Ga. App. 23 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1923
Tankersley sued Joe Brown, doing business as Brown Transfer Company, for $1,100 damages for injuries alleged to have been inflicted 'upon the plaintiff and his automobile by reason of
1. The evidence was sufficient to support the verdict.
2. The court did not err in refusing to permit the witness Wiley, who had been recalled for further examination by the defendant, to testify that he did not know what person told him to take the car, this feature of the case having already been gone into thoroughly by the same witnéss, and he having previously sworn to the fact sought to be adduced.
3. “In a suit for a negligent tort, where the question of diminution of damages by reason of negligence on the part of the person injured is not raised by the pleadings of either party, it does not constitute reversible error for the court, in the absence of a request, to omit to charge on that subject, where he has charged fully as to the effect of the negligence of the injured person upon the right to recover at all; although it is the better practice to charge
4. The concluding part of an excerpt from the charge, that plaintiff would be entitled to recover if by the exercise of ordinary care on his part he could not have avoided the injury “to himself and his automobile,” is not reversible error because the conjunctive “and” instead of the disjunctive “or” was used in the above-quoted clause, or because the charge did not apprise the jury that “if plaintiff could have avoided the personal injury to himself by the exercise of ordinary care, he con Id not have recovered on account of this personal injury, although he may not have been able to avoid the injury to his automobile by the exercise of ordinary care,” it not being at all likely that the jury was misled by the charge, or that a different verdict would, have been rendered had the word “or” been used as suggested.
5. It was not error to overrule the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.