60 Ga. App. 567 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1939
Mrs. J. H. Iiodges brought suit against G. F. Lang-ran and Seaboard Loan and Savings Association Inc. to recover damages on account of injuries sustained by her because of the negligent operation of an automobile by Langran, an employee of the defendant corporation. On the trial of the case the court directed a verdict for the defendant corporation, on the ground that the evidence showed that the automobile driven by Langran, which collided with the car in which the plaintiff was a guest, was at the time being used by him for his own pleasure and against the positive instructions of his employer. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff against Langran, who brought the case to this court by bill of exceptions. The only assignments of error, as argued or insisted on in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error, relate to one ground of a special demurrer and certain special grounds of the motion for new trial, hereinafter dealt with. In this court the plaintiff in error filed a motion to make Seaboard Loan and Savings Association Inc. a party defendant, the said
The defendant in error filed in this court a motion to dismiss the writ of error on certain grounds, all of which are without merit, and the motion is denied.
It is contended by the plaintiff in error that the court erred in overruling a ground of special demurrer to the allegations of the petition that the defendant Langran “suddenly, and without warning, darted out about twenty feet in front of plaintiff’s automobile from a line of traffic going south on the opposite side of Spring Street, running rapidly across a line in the center of said street several feet and into and against the left front and left side of plaintiff’s automobile with terrific force, in open violation of” a certain quoted ordinance of the City of Atlanta, the ground of the objection being that the allegations were immaterial in that the ordinance was inapplicable to the facts set forth in the petition. It is fundamental that the office of a special demurrer is to point out defects with particularity; and inasmuch as it is not shown how the allegations are immaterial or the ordinance inapplicable, the court did not err in overruling this ground for any reason assigned.
The first special ground of the motion for new trial complains that the court erred in charging the jury: “I charge you, gentlemen, in passing upon the question of pain and suffering you may consider the decrease in her ability to work, decrease in her earning capacity, loss or impairment of her powers or faculties, any scars, disfigurements, and damage to her body resulting from such injuries; the shortening of life from actual worry and pain necessarily caused by the injuries is also an element which you may consider in passing upon the question of suffering and pain. As to the amount, gentlemen, the law declares that there is no standard by which to measure it except the enlightened conscience of impartial jurors,” it being contended that the charge was error and confusing, for the reason that the court failed to explain that the plaintiff, being a married woman, could not recover for a decrease in earnings, in that such earnings'would belong to her husband, and because by the use of the words “decrease in earning capacity”
The second special ground complains that the amount of the verdict was excessive; that the amount of $7500 awarded by the jury was not authorized by the nature of the plaintiff’s injuries. It has been many times ruled that the verdict can not be held to be excessive unless manifestly resulting from prejudice, bias, or other corrupt motive of the jury. Nothing appears in the record to indicate that the jury was influenced by any improper consideration. While it is strongly contended by the plaintiff in error that the amount was not justified under the evidence, we can not say that it was not authorized. The plaintiff was shown to have been seriously and permanently injured. After the collision she was confined to her bed for about nine weeks. As a result of the injury she suffers from diplopia or double vision of the left eye, nervousness and inability to walk steadily, is at times awkward in speech, and is entirely incapacitated to attend to her household duties, all of which conditions did not exist before her injury. It is argued that there was testimony from her eye doctor that nature “would come to the rescue,” and, if the plaintiff did not wear a flap over the injured eye, would induce the plaintiff to look only through the right eye. Nevertheless the plaintiff would still be deprived
The fourth special ground complains that the court erred in rejecting from evidence a certain sketch made by one of the defendant’s witnesses, it being contended that it illustrated the testimony of the witness that the car in which the plaintiff was riding was being driven on the wrong side of the street, and that said sketch tended to show that the proximate cause of her injury was the negligence of the driver of the car occupied by her. The only testimony by the witness as to the sketch was as follows: “The picture [the sketch] looks like some of my scribbling. I did that. This is my ear against this right-hand side of the street there. I drove over there because this other car was coming at me at this angle, and I had to keep him from hitting me. This is Dr. Hodges’ car.” The collision in question took place on the Spring Street viaduct in Atlanta. Manifestly, the sketch, or “scribbling” as
The fifth ground complains that the court erred in excluding from consideration of the jury a certain envelope and enclosed letter addressed to the defendant, G. F. Langran, at Miami, Florida, but without any street or office designation, it being contended that such evidence was material and would have benefited the defendant, because it tended to account for his absence from the trial of the case, in view of the argument of counsel for the plaintiff calling the jury’s attention to the failure of the defendant to appear and testify in his own behalf. The only purpose of introducing the envelope and enclosed letter, with reference to the trial of the case against the defendant, would be to show that an effort was made by counsel to notify the defendant to appear at the trial, and that he did not appear because he did not receive the notice as addressed. But the defendant was charged with the legal duty of keeping advised as to the progress of the litigation, notwithstanding the fact that he was represented by counsel. Lovelace v. Lovelace, 179 Ga. 822 (177 S. E. 685); Beavers v. Cassels, 56 Ga. App. 146, 153 (192 S. E. 249), and cit. If, instead, he hazards the risk of being notified by his counsel in time to attend the trial, and an envelope containing the notice is insufficiently addressed to him and is returned undelivered, such papers are not admissible in evidence for the purpose of showing an excuse for the defendant’s non-appearance, especially where it is not shown that his counsel could not have addressed him more definitely than at “Miami, Fla.,” a city of considerable population and size. Moreover, it is to be gathered from the brief of his counsel that the real reason Langran did not attend the trial was that he wished to avoid being subjected to service in another suit growing out of the same collision, and another reason advanced is that he was financially unable to come to Atlanta. No reversible error is shown in this ground of the motion.
Another ground of the motion for new trial is based on al
Although the original statement by Dr. Jackson, in his affidavit procured by counsel for the defendant, as to Mrs. Hodges having in a mild degree arterio sclerosis, or hardening of the arteries, does not seem to have been contradicted, it could hardly be said that this fact alone would probably produce a different result on another trial of the case. It may readily be seen from the affidavits referred to that counsel for the defendant could not reasonably hope to prove by the affiants that Mrs. Hodges ever had or now has any condition of pellagra; and we can not say that a “mild” condition of arterio sclerosis would probably cause the jury on another trial to return a verdict for an amount less than $7500. Without citing authorities it may be stated that the grant of a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence rests in the discretion of the trial judge, and that for 'this court to hold that his discretion has been abused it must affirmatively appear that the evidence submitted by affidavits is such as would probably produce a different result on another trial. From a close examination of the record we do not think that this has been made to appear. Accordingly, the discretion of the judge in refusing a new trial on this ground will not be disturbed.
Judgment affirmed.