It is strongly contended that the evidence, being circumstantial, and being in conflict with the direct testimony of the driver of the defendant’s truck, is insufficient to support the verdict on the gеneral grounds, as the plaintiff has failed to show that the truck by which he was injured belonged to the defendant. The rule to be applied by the appellate court in testing whether or not circumstantial evidence offered in the trial court is insufficient as a matter of law to support a verdict on some particular issue in the case is as follows: “When the party upon whom the burden of an issue rests seeks to carry it, not by direct proof, but by inferences, he has not, in this reasonable sense, submitted any evidencе for a jury’s decision, until the circumstances he places in proof tend in some proximate degree to establish the conclusion he claims; and for this, the facts shown must not only reasonably support that conclusion, but also render less probable all inconsistent conclusions.”
Georgia Ry. & Electric Co.
v.
Harris,
1
Ga. App.
714, 717 (
The plaintiff alleged that the use of wоoden standards was negligence, and there was considerable testimony in the record that using wooden standards to hold the lumber in the truck in .place was not a safe practice. The plaintiff’s attorney, in his cross-examination of the defendant, attempted to force him to admit that steel standards would have been stronger and relatively inexpensive. In view of the freedom allowed on cross- *95 examination generally, it was not error, after asking the defendant how much weight a wooden standard would suрport, to inquire whether it would be possible for a man to break a steel standard by leaning against it. In point of fact it does not appear from this special ground thаt the witness ever completed his answer to the question. This ground is without merit.
The plaintiff here sought recovery against the defendant owner of the truck only, on grounds of negligenсe which were the personal acts of the owner and other grounds which were the acts of the owner’s servant within the scope of the master’s business. Thus, both classes оf negligence alleged referred to negligence of the defendant, either direct or imputable to him through the acts of his servant. Code § 105-108. No issue being-made on the triаl of the case but that the driver was the servant of the defendant, and that his negligence, if it existed as alleged, was imputable to the defendant, there was no error in refеrring in the charge to “negligence of the defendant” instead of “negligence of the defendant’s driver.” Special ground 2 is without merit.
A portion of the charge on damagеs is excepted to' on the ground that it authorized recovery for an item not sought by the plaintiff in his pleadings (future pain and suffering); that a charge was given on decreasеd capacity to labor while damages for this were not sought by the pleadings; that loss of future earnings and loss of future earning capacity were not distinguished and the cоurt did not submit to the jury the question of loss of future earnings; because the charge gave the jury the right to return a verdict not in accordance with evidence as to loss and expenses but any sum they saw fit in their enlightened consciences, and that he unduly emphasized the right of recovery for pain and suffering. The court charged that the amount of dаmages should compensate for injuries received, that hospital and doctor bills should be taken into consideration, and that elements of future pain and suffering and impairment of ability to labor in the future, when found, must be reduced to present cash value, and the court nowhere charged that there could be a recovery for lоss of future earnings. Impairment of ability to labor is of course a part of pain and suffering- and need not be reduced to present cash value.
Southern Ry. Co.
v.
Bottoms,
*96
35
Ga. App.
804 (2) (
The obj ections of the plaintiff in error are accordingly without merit. This charge did not, as in
Southern Grocery Stores
v.
Smith,
59
Ga. App.
631 (1) (
The trial court did not err in denying the amended motion for new trial.
Judgment affirmed.
