13 S.E.2d 209 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1941
1. The amended petition was not subject to general demurrer; and none of the rulings upon the special demurrers shows harmful error.
2. The evidence authorized the verdict; and none of the special grounds of the motion for new trial shows cause for a reversal of the judgment.
1. The gist of the general demurrer was that the allegations of the amended petition, construed most strongly against the plaintiff, show that if the plaintiff suffered the damages sued for, such damages "were the result of his own negligence and carelessness and not the result of the negligence and carelessness of the defendant." In Hutchison v. Greene County,
Paragraph 27 of the petition, in part, reads as follows: "Written notice was given said county within one year after the happening of said wreck, said notice stating the place where the accident occurred, the cause of said accident, and the amount of damages sustained by petitioner." The paragraph was specifically demurred to on the grounds that the written notice referred to therein was not incorporated in the paragraph or elsewhere in the petition, and that the allegations as to the notice were not sufficiently specific to fully apprise the county authorities of the nature, extent, and date of the demands, and how, to whom, and when, and in what form it was presented, and the amount of such demands, so that the county authorities would be able to properly defend the plaintiff's suit. Conceding that the notice referred to in the paragraph should have been set forth in more detail and should have been incorporated in the petition or attached as an exhibit thereto, we think that under all the facts of the case the overruling of the special demurrer was not harmful error. The petition had alleged that James B. Jardine was the commissioner of roads and revenues of the county, that the affairs of the county generally were under his control, and, specifically, that the roads and bridges were maintained and repaired under his direction and supervision. On the trial the following notice signed by the plaintiff was introduced in evidence: "June 5, 1937. Mr. James B. Jardine, Chairman Coffee County Commissioners, Douglas, Ga. Dear Sir: Being your regular monthly meeting will be Monday June 7, I thought it best that I write you regarding damages to my car from being run off the Dry Creek bridge south of Nicholls. Confirming our conversation in your office several days after the wreck, I will be glad for you to pay the repair bill of $235.90 to the car, and I will sign a release of any damage to either myself or my wife for personal damages, unless something of a much more serious nature should develop *371 from our hurts. If after you have talked with the other members of the board and you would like to have any additional proof of the cause of the car going off the bridge I will have the shop foreman that had the car repaired make an affidavit that the left rear wheel was crushed and that the frame was bent and the left rear housing sprung from some sudden strain on that rear wheel. That, together with my tracks on the bridge, would show that the hole that I ran into caused me to be pulled off the left side of the bridge. You have seen the bridge and know about the conditions as they were at the time of the wreck, and are familiar with things of that nature, and for that reason I have not gone to the trouble and expense of having the witnesses make affidavits. I will greatly appreciate it if you can see your way clear to pay this bill for me."
The undisputed evidence showed that this letter was mailed about June 5, 1937, by the plaintiff, that it was received by Mr. Jardine on or about the same date, and before the suit was filed, and that he as county commissioner, soon after receiving the letter, went to Dry Creek bridge and examined the bridge, investigated the accident, and declined to pay any damages to the plaintiff. Of course the object in requiring that any claim against a county must be presented by written demand to the proper county authorities before suit is filed and that said demand should apprise said authorities of the nature and extent of the claim, how it arose, who makes it, and what damages, if any, are claimed, and the amount thereof, is to have the proper county authorities promptly apprised of the material facts about the claim so that they can properly investigate it and either pay or reject it before suit is filed. In this case the evidence demanded a finding that the claim was timely presented in writing to the proper county authority, named the bridge where the claimant's car was wrecked, stated in detail the causes of the wreck, the damage to the car, the exact amount demanded from the county for said damage; and that the proper county authority, after receiving said demand, promptly went to the bridge in question, investigated the wreck, and refused to pay the claim. Under these circumstances it is obvious that the county was thoroughly apprised of all the material facts of said wreck, and that the error in overruling the special demurrer was harmless. In Troup County v. Boddie,
2. The court did not err in admitting in evidence the letter written by the plaintiff to James B. Jardine, county commissioner of Coffee County, for any reason assigned, the letter being material and relevant to the issues in the case.
Complaint is made, in a special ground of the motion, of the admission in evidence of three photographs of the bridge in question. The plaintiff testified that the photographs "are pictures of this bridge made by Mr. Bernard Rogers. They were made in my presence about thirty days ago and nearly three years after I had this wreck. In general the bridge as shown in these pictures was in the same condition at the time I had the wreck as it is shown *373
to be at the time these pictures were made. I pointed out to the photographer, Mr. Rogers, the place to make the pictures and the pictures are an exact replication of the scene photographed." The defendant objected to the pictures on the grounds: (1) that they were irrelevant and prejudicial; (2) that they were taken about one month before the trial and about three years after the wreck, and presented to the jury the picture of the bridge as it stood thirty days before the trial and not as it was at the time of the wreck; and (3) that the photographs had not been identified by the photographer or otherwise so as to entitle them to be admitted in evidence. In Georgia Power Co. v.Gillespie,
Judgment affirmed. MacIntyre and Gardner, JJ., concur.