This case arose from a collision between a motorcycle, operated by plaintiff (appellee) and an automobile owned by defendant Checker Cab Co. and operated by defendant Cuadra. The case was tried before a jury in the Fulton Superior Court, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff on March 6, 1974. On March 13,1974, the defendants filed their joint motion for new trial relying on the general grounds. Annexed to the motion for new trial was an order requiring the plaintiff to show cause on May 23,1974 at 11:00 a.m. why the motion should not be granted. On that date and time, the plaintiffs counsel appeared before the court as ordered; neither defendant nor either of their counsel did so. No reason was given to the court or opposing counsel for their failure to appear. The superior court judge then dismissed the defendants’ motion for new trial for want of prosecution. On June 20, 1974, the defendants filed a notice of appeal "from the verdict and judgment entered in this action on the 6th day of March, 1974,” and subsequently filed an enumeration of errors relating to specific errors which are alleged to have occurred in the trial of the case. The dismissal of the defendants’ motion for new trial was not complained of in the enumeration of errors. The plaintiff moves to dismiss the appeal.
1. The foundation on which the motion to dismiss is predicated is the decision of the Supreme Court in
Hill v. Willis,
In support of the motion to dismiss, we are cited
Munn v. Kelliam,
However, on March 2, 1972, the Supreme Court added subsection (e) to its Rule 14, to wit, "The enumeration of errors shall be deemed to include and present for review all judgments necessary for a determination of the errors specified.” This court adopted an identical rule (Rule 14 (e)) on the same date. In
Slay v. Brady,
2. Enumerations of error 1 and 2 relate to the way and manner in which the trial was conducted. "It is fundamental that every court possesses the inherent power to preserve and enforce order and compel obedience to its judgments and orders, to control the conduct of its officers and all other persons connected with the judicial proceedings before it. . . This court will not undertake to control the wide discretion vested in the trial court in the exercise of this fundamental power unless it is made to appear that wrong or oppression has resulted from an abuse of such discretion reposed in the court.”
Jackson v. State,
3. Enumeration of error 3 cites the verdict as excessive as a matter of law. We disagree. The facts surrounding the accident were hotly disputed. To believe the defendant, was to disbelieve the plaintiffs witness and vice versa. The medical evidence showed that the plaintiff was treated by more than a dozen doctors, and was operated on for his injuries and hospitalized on three different occasions over a period of approximately two and one-half years. His total medical expenses up to the time of trial, were over $6,000. According to the treating physicians, his injuries were permanent, some of which would require future surgery. At the time of the collision, the plaintiff was 27 years of age. The evidence showed that he sustained substantial loss of earnings in addition to pain and suffering, past, present and future. The verdict and judgment were authorized by the evidence.
4. The fourth enumeration of error relates to the sufficiency of the proof of the loss incurred by the plaintiff as the result of damage to his motorcycle. The transcript reveals that the plaintiff testified without objection that in his opinion the motorcycle was worth "about seventeen hundred dollars” before the collision (T.48) and that in his opinion (unobjected to) the salvage value after the wreck was "$200 at the most.” This was sufficient for the jury to make an award for the plaintiffs property damage.
5. In the fifth enumeration of error, complaint is made of the plaintiffs cross examination of the defendant regarding his treatment as a patient at Parkwood Hospital for approximately five weeks, "about a year” before the collision in question (T. 307-311). On direct examination the defendant was questioned about any physical disability, whether he was under the care of any *31 doctor for any physical condition, or under the influence of any drug or medicine at the time of the collision. We find no reversible error in this enumeration.
Judgment affirmed.
