6 S.E.2d 65 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1939
Certain errors of commission in the charge of the court require another trial of the case.
Grounds 4(b), 5, and 7 complain of certain excerpts from the charge in which the jury were instructed, in effect, that it was for them to determine whether plaintiff's son and Howard Davis were engaged in a joint enterprise, and whether the son had the right of directing, controlling, or influencing the operation of the car while riding therein as an invited guest. The excerpts were assigned as error on the ground that no evidence was introduced tending to show that plaintiff's son and Howard Davis were engaged in a joint enterprise, or that her son had any authority to direct, control, or influence the operation of the car, and therefore no such issues were in the case and it was error to instruct the jury thereon. The only evidence bearing on this question was as follows: Plaintiff's son and Howard Davis worked at the same place and usually rode there in the car of Davis, and that on the morning of their death they were riding to their work in the car which Davis was driving. The undisputed evidence showed that Davis owned the car and that Hare was riding therein as an invited guest; and there was no evidence, direct or circumstantial, that he had any right or duty to control, direct, or influence the operation of the automobile, or that he and Davis were engaged in a joint enterprise in controlling, directing, and governing such operation. In Fuller v. Mills,
Grounds 4(a) and 6 assign error on excerpts from the charge submitting to the jury the question whether the plaintiff's son was guilty of contributory negligence. We think the grounds are meritorious. The record contains no evidence, direct or circumstantial, authorizing such instructions. "There being no evidence to show that the deceased contributed in the slightest degree to the injury which caused his death, the charge of the court on the subject of contributory negligence was not founded on the evidence, and was erroneous." Bain v. Athens c. Works,
Ground 10 alleges error on the following charge: "I instruct you that it is a rule of evidence, a rule of law, that the existence of a fact testified to by one positive witness is to be believed, rather than that such fact did not exist because many witnesses who had the same opportunity of observation swear that they did not see or know of its having existed. This rule shall not apply when two parties having equal facilities for seeing or hearing a thing, one swears that it occurred, and the other that it did not." This charge was error in that the judge failed to state in connection therewith that the rule applies only where the witnesses are of equal credibility. Humphries v. State,
The remaining excerpts from the charge, complained of, when considered in the light of the entire charge disclose no reversible error.
Judgment reversed. MacIntyre and Guerry, JJ., concur.