Appellant-plaintiffs Mr. and Mrs. Currie brought suit for damages arising out of a collision between an automobile driven by Mrs. Currie and an automobile driven by appellee-defendant. Mrs. Currie sought to recover for personal injuries suffered in the collision. Mr. Currie sought to recover for loss of consortium. In addition, both appellants sought punitive damages, based upon general allegations that the collision was the result of appellee’s “wanton and wilful” conduct. Appellee’s motion for partial summary judgment as to appellants’ claim for punitive damages was granted. Appellants appeal.
OCGA § 51-12-5 permits a jury to award punitive damages where “there are aggravating circumstances, in either the act or the intention. . . .” “[S]uch damages ‘cannot be imposed in any case unless there is wilful misconduct, malice, fraud, wantonness, oppression, or that entire want of care which would raise the presumption of a conscious indifference to consequences. [Cit.]’ [Cit.]”
Rossville Apts. v. Britton,
Appellee filed interrogatories, requesting that appellants give “each and every fact” upon which they relied in support of their general allegations that his “wilful and wanton” conduct authorized a recovery of punitive damages. Appellants responded that they were relying upon the fact that appellee was physically unable to drive an automobile and had continued to drive notwithstanding his limitations. Appellee, in support of his motion for summary judgment, submitted his own affidavit, as well as that of a physician, both of which were to the effect that, at the time of the collision, he was physically capable of driving safely and without restriction. In opposition, appellants submitted only the affidavit of a witness who stated that, on one prior occasion, he had seen appellee drive dangerously and recklessly as to speed and following too closely but without injurious result. This affidavit was evidently offered to show that appellee had a habit of driving recklessly. Evidence that one drove recklessly on a prior occasion would not, however, tend to prove that he habitually does so.
East Tenn. &c. R. Co. v. Kane,
“ ‘When the [defendant-] movant for summary judgment presents evidence apparently destroying the plaintiff’s cause of action, the movant has met his burden, and the burden then shifts to the plaintiff to present any alternative theories, if such exist, which would support his action and within which genuine issues of fact remain.’ [Cits.]”
State Farm Fire &c. Co. v. Southern Bell Tel. &c. Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
