CINCINNATI, NEW ORLEANS & TEXAS PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY
v.
HILLEY.
Court of Appeals of Georgia.
*198 Pittman & Kinney, L. Hugh Kemp, Donald Loggins, for appellant.
EBERHARDT, Judge.
1. Appellee having failed to point out any material inaccuracy or incompleteness of statement in appellant's brief and having made no additional statement or cited any additional parts of the transcript, we accept appellant's statement as prima facie true and decide the case on the basis of the statement and the evidence cited and quoted. Rule 17 (b) (1), this court (
2. (a) There can be no doubt that a bailor[1] has a right of *199 action against a third party for damage to the bailed property resulting in injury to his rights of general property or reversion. Code §§ 12-210, 105-1704, 105-1705; Lockhart v. Western & A. R.,
This contention is without merit. In Harvard Trust Co. v. Racheotes,
Similarly, in Anheuser-Busch, Inc. v. Starley,
In McCoy v. Moore,
The decisions in our courts are in harmony with the cited cases. In Raleigh & Gaston R. Co. v. Western & A. R. Co.,
(b) As to recovery by the bailor for loss of use of the locomotive, the general rule is that an owner of property out of possession can only recover against a third person for an injury done to his reversionary interest or for interference with the availability of the chattel to his possession. Johnson v. Lovett,
The evidence cited by appellant bailor is to the effect that the railroads within the system used locomotives interchangeably, the user paying the owner a sum calculated on the amount of use. Since the bailment was not for a term but at will and the loss of use was an injury to the bailor's rather than the bailee's interest, and there being ample evidence to show the value of the loss of use, the bailor could recover therefor. Thus the directing of a verdict for defendant was erroneous for this reason also.
*203 3. (a) Although appellant bailor has not separately enumerated as error the overruling of each ground of the motion for new trial, since the motion as amended is included in the record and the brief argues each ground separately, the enumeration of the overruling of the motion as amended reaches these special grounds. City of Douglas v. Rigdon,
(b) The special grounds complain of the exclusion of evidence relating to the custom, practices, and course of dealings of the railroads in regard to the interchanging of locomotives. The evidence was not offered to vary a written or specific oral contract in the sense of the parol evidence rule no such contract existed, and the customs, course of dealings, etc., were the contract. Among other things the evidence as to the interchange of locomotives generally would have shown the nature and extent of this particular bailment made in the course of such dealings, including the fact that appellant bailor would be charged for the repairs made by the bailee Southern. The evidence was admissible and its exclusion was error. See, e.g., Wood v. Frank Graham Co.,
Judgment reversed. Jordan, P. J., and Pannell, J., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Concerning the bailee's rights, see Schley v. Lyon,
[2] (a) Property damage collateral source insurance: City of Rome v. Rhodes,
(b) Wrongful death (1) collateral source insurance: Western & A. R. v. Meigs,
(c) Personal injuries (1) collateral source continuation of wages: Nashville, C. & St. L. R. Co. v. Miller,
[3] Conversely, the fact that the bailee has paid the bailor the value of the property destroyed does not affect the bailee's right of action against the tortfeasor. Marietta Ice & Coal Co. v. Western & A. R. Co.,
