93 Ga. App. 241 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1956
1. The petition as originally drawn undertook to assert a cause of action against the defendant, Mrs. Curtis Jenkins, Sr., for damage proximately caused the plaintiff by the negligent conduct of Curtis Jenkins, Jr., the defendant’s minor son.
There is no contention that the petition without aid of amendment sufficiently alleged negligence on the part of the defendant’s son resulting in damage to the plaintiff.
The petition was defective in that it failed to set forth facts showing that the defendant was responsible for the negligent conduct of her son. The petition simply set forth that she assisted him in purchasing an automobile to be used in business and for his pleasure by signing notes given for its purchase price.
The rule is well stated in Community Gas Co. v. Williams, 87 Ga. App. 68, 74 (73 S. E. 2d 119) where it is said: “The tests frequently applied to amendments are that the amendment may contain additional matter descriptive of the same wrong pleaded in the original petition, but must not plead any other or different wrong; it must, in connection with the petition, set forth a group of facts the result of which is to conclusively evince the existence of a legal wrong; it must be germane to the petition in that it further elucidates the legal wrong intended to be declared upon, and it must not plead any other or different wrong than that originally set forth.”
If allegations material to the cause pleaded could not be stricken and contradictory averments substituted in their stead every case mispleaded by reason of inadvertence or lack of information on the part of the pleader concerning the subject matter of the suit, would have to be dismissed and recast in an entirely new petition.
Judgment affirmed.