Plaintiffs Misty Jo Gaddis and Jeff Littleton sued defendant Lois Skelton for injuries they sustained in an automobile accident. A jury found for plaintiffs, but awarded them a relatively small amount of damages. On appeal, they challenge the trial court’s jury instruction regarding the evidentiary effect of a guilty plea. Concluding that the charge was a proper statement of the law, we affirm. 1
Prior to trial, defendant had pled guilty to a traffic citation for failing to yield the right-of-way, and evidence of this plea was admit ted in the jury trial of this civil action. At defendant’s request, the trial court charged the jury: “Under Georgia law, in a civil action such as this, evidence that the defendant pled guilty to a traffic charge in a prior proceeding is admissible in evidence and may be considered by you along with all the other evidence as a circumstance to be weighed by you. . . . Simply because the defendant pled guilty to a traffic charge is not conclusive on the issue of whether or not she in fact violated the traffic laws or was negligent, nor does it preclude her from introducing evidence as to the reasons for entering such a plea.”
We have long held that a guilty plea to a traffic violation is admissible as an admission against interest, but does not conclusively establish negligence; it is “only a circumstance to be considered along with the other evidence in the civil action for damages.”
Roesler v. Etheridge,
In support of their argument that a guilty plea is conclusive on the question of guilt (and therefore negligence), plaintiffs cite
Cannon v. Street,
Here, defendant Skelton asserts in her brief that she presented evidence at trial rebutting her guilty plea. We cannot confirm this because we do not have a transcript of the evidence presented at trial. But it is the obligation of plaintiffs, as appellants, to show error in the record; and in the absence of a transcript demonstrating otherwise, we assume the court’s instruction was properly supported by defendant’s rebuttal of her earlier admission. See
Acker v. Jenkins,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
Arguably, any error in the charge on negligence was harmless since the jury had to find defendant negligent to award plaintiffs any amount of damages. Nonetheless, we choose to address plaintiffs’ argument in order to clarify the law regarding the admissibility and effect of evidence that a party in a civil traffic accident case previously pled guilty to a traffic citation involving the same incident.
