On March 25, 1926, Mrs. G. M. Endsley brought a suit in the municipal court of Atlanta, to recover for damage done to her automobile in a collision with a street-car of the defendant, the Georgia Railway & Power Company. On March 26, 1926, she brought a suit against the same defendant in the superior
It is well settled that a single tortious act which causes only personal injuries gives to the injured individual but a single right of action, no matter how varied or numerous the injuries may be. 1 C. J. 1117, n. 2. It is equally as well agreed that but one action may be maintained for a single wrongful or negligent act which destroys or damages numerous items of another’s property. 1 C. J. 1117; 1 R. C. L. 346. See also Oglesby v. Slodghill, 23 Ga. 590; Cunningham v. Norris, 19 Ga. 583 (
There is however, on the last proposition, American authority to the contrary. See Riley v. Sicilian Paving Co.,
If the reasoning there given be correct — if the gravamen of the cause is the damage, it would follow that a separate cause arises for each item of damage that flows from a tortious act, which, as we have seen, is not the law either in the United States or in England. And if a separate cause does not arise for each injury inflicted, we obviously must look elsewhere for the essence of the cause of action. It is true that it is argued that but a single right is invaded when personal injuries are inflicted, and but a single right
Not a little of the difficulty in deciding cases of this character apparently arises from a reluctance on the part of courts to give effect to rules of procedure which seem to them harsh and unfair. Thus Judge Speer has stated that he was influenced in reaching a decision in the Boyd ease by his desire to prevent the perpetration of what he believed would be a judicial wrong. He said: “It is of course to the interest of the public that there should be an end of litigation; but where the authorities are in palpable . . conflict and where no controlling rule has been announced for the direction of the court, it will hesitate long before denying to a plaintiff the right to a hearing upon his declaration of enduring personal injury, permanent mutilation, and the destruction of his life work, because, forsooth, through the mistake of an attorney a declaration had been filed at the same time to recover the value of a machine.” But the rule against splitting causes of action as embodied in our Code, § 4331, is neither harsh nor inflexible. And
It is quite true that the rule is “necessary to prevent multiplicity of suits, burdensome expense and delays to plaintiffs, and vexatious litigation against defendants,” as was said in the case of Mobile & O. R. Co. v. Matthews, supra; but it is primarily for the benefit of defendants, and being for their benefit they may waive it; this waiver will be presumed if a plaintiff maintains two suits against a defendant at the same time for different items of the same demand, and he fails to interpose timely objection. Thus in the case of McDonald v. Tison, 94 Ga. 549 (
While the effect of the foregoing decision is to hold that the Court of Appeals erred in its rulings of law, yet its judgment is affirmed for the reasons stated in this opinion; and that court will direct the trial court to apply, upon the next hearing, the rulings made in this decision to the plaintiff’s demurrer to the plea of former recovery.
Judgment affirmed, with direction.
