Appellant Camp rented a bulldozer at a daily rate from appellee Cline, to be used in Camp’s landfill, agreeing to be fully responsible for it. Apparently, a tractor operator, employed by a sand and gravel company owned and operated by Camp and who frequently worked for Camp at the landfill, negligently or deliberately drove the bulldozer into a 10-foot deep, garbage-filled pond of water. Cline sued Camp and the administrator of the estate of the above-mentioned operator for damages for rental of the vehicle and costs of its salvage and repair. Camp appeals from an adverse $14,000 verdict and *329 judgment.
1. The denial of the appellant’s motions for directed verdict and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict as to items of damages other than for rental, was not error.
"In all cases of bailment after proof of loss, the burden of proof is on the bailee to show proper diligence.” Code § 12-104. This presumption of negligence was sufficient to authorize a verdict for the appellee bailor, where the evidence concerning the cause of the damage to the bailed vehicle was insufficient to remove every inference of negligence by the bailee.
See Red Cross Laundry v. Tuten,
2. It was not reversible error, if error, to deny the appellant’s motion to strike from the complaint, allegations and prayers regarding the cost to repair the rented vehicle, where the trial judge refused to admit *330 evidence of the minimum costs of necessary repairs, did not charge the jury that repair cost was to be considered, and properly instructed the jury that the measure of damages was diminution in market value.
3. This action was against joint defendants, one of whom was the representative of the deceased tractor operator and was an employee of co-defendant Camp. In this case, therefore, the trial judge did not err in excluding testimony of two of Camp’s employees as to the decedent’s statements to them to the effect that he had run the rented bulldozer, with a six-pack of beer on it, into the pond, the two witnesses having been active participants in the communications with the decedent. Code § 38-1603 (5, 7). Moreover, even if the testimony had been admitted, it would not have exculpated defendant Camp, who could still be held liable for the actions and negligence of his aforesaid employee.
4. It was not reversible error, if error, to disallow defendant Camp’s attempted impeachment of his own witness by showing an alleged inconsistency between his $15,000 appraisal of the fair market value of the rented vehicle given on direct examination and his estimate of such value of $10,000 to $30,000, given on subsequent recross examination. Further, redirect examination brought out testimony from this witness indicating that his higher appraisal had been based upon a hypothetical increased demand in the coal fields of Kentucky, and that at the time in question such increased demand "had pretty much passed.”
5. Error is enumerated on the denial of the appellant’s motion for mistrial based upon the plaintiffs testimony that defendant Camp had told him after the rented bulldozer had been pulled out of the water that "he was going to let his insurance pay for it.” Such testimony was inadmissible; however, the denial of the motion for mistrial was not reversible error. The jury was instructed thereafter that the parties had stipulated that defendant Camp did not have insurance to cover this particular vehicle, and that insurance was no issue in the case. Furthermore, later in the trial, one of the plaintiffs witnesses, Mr. Elliott, testified without objection that he had heard defendant Camp tell the plaintiff that he knew
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he was responsible for the machine, that "we will get it out of the water,” and that "I know that I’m fully responsible for fixing your tractor.” In retrospect, this supplied the admission of fault which had been missing at the time of the ruling on the motion for mistrial. The admission of the earlier testimony is not reversible error, then, since evidence to substantially the same effect and of statements made by the defendant after the event were admitted without objection. See Atlas
Supply Co. v. U. S. Fidelity &c. Co.,
6. The denial of a motion for mistrial — based upon the plaintiffs counsel’s statement during a colloquy, "that’s what [defendant Camp] was getting paid for, some $8,300 a week” — was not error. Defendant Camp had just given equivocal testimony as to how many days per week his landfill was being operated, saying one time that it was 5 1/2 days, yet another time 7 days for some weeks. While reference to a party’s worldly circumstances or financial standing in negligence actions is generally irrelevant and harmful
(Usry v. Bostick,
7. A charge on the negligence of an agent being imputable to his principal, was authorized by evidence that the person who drove the bulldozer into the pond was an employee of another company owned and operated by defendant Camp, and that such employee was occasionally directed to work at the landfill, driving heavy machinery (except when he had been drinking).
8. The appellant complains that the charge — "The engagement or duties of a hirer are to put the thing to no other use than that for which it is hired, to take ordinary care in its use, to redeliver it at the expiration of the bailment as required generally with the terms of the hiring” — erroneously made him an insurer of the *332 redelivery of the bailed property. The instruction complained of, however, is an almost verbatim quotation from Code § 12-203, including the provision therein "to take ordinary care in its use,” which excludes the theory of the defendant bailee’s being an "insurer.”
9. It was not error to refuse to give a requested charge to the effect that the plaintiff could not recover damages for both the cost of repairs made and the diminution of the fair market value, for the reasons given in Division 2 hereinabove. Even though this issue may have been raised by the pleadings, it was properly not charged because it was unsupported by evidence (which the judge had excluded).
White v. Hammond,
10. The requested charge on the defendant bailee’s duty to use ordinary diligence or care, was substantially covered by the judge’s instructions to the jury.
The verdict and judgment were not erroneous for any reason urged.
Judgment affirmed.
