Mary Lissmore (plaintiff) brought an action against Pauline Kincade and F. J. Norman, Jr. (defendants), seeking damages for injuries she allegedly sustained when the vehicle in which she was a passenger collided with vehicles being operated by defendants. The evidence adduced at a jury trial showed that at about 11:30 in the morning on February 21, 1986, plaintiff was a passenger in an automobile being operated by Willa K. Cornelius. Ms. Cornelius was traveling south on Highway 41 between Hahira, Georgia and Valdosta, Georgia. Defendant Kincade was operating a vehicle in front of Ms. Cornelius and defendant Norman was operating a pickup truck behind the Cornelius vehicle.
About four miles north of Valdosta, defendant Kincade noticed a Georgia State Patrol roadblock and, in preparation for an identification check, she “moved over a little and . . . tried to . . .” open the glove compartment to retrieve her insurance identification card. In the process, defendant Kincade “accidently hit [the] brakes . . . ,” causing her car to stop “on the side of the highway,” “[n]ot too far . . .” from the roadblock. In response, Ms. Cornelius came “to a rapid stop . . .” and defendant Norman took evasive action, maneuvering his truck to the “ditch” on the side of the road. “As [defendant Norman] went around the Cornelius vehicle, [his] left rear struck her right rear fender . . . ,” propelling the Cornelius vehicle into defendant Kincade’s vehicle. From this and other evidence adduced at trial, the jury returned a verdict in favor of defendants. This appeal followed the denial of plaintiff’s motion for new trial. Held:
1. Contrary to plaintiff’s first contention, the evidence was sufficient to support the verdict for defendants.
“ ‘ “In passing on the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict, the appellate courts are to afford the evidence that view
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which is most favorable to the [prevailing party] and which is designed to uphold the verdict. All conflicts must be rendered against the [non-prevailing party], and if there is any evidence to support the verdict it must be affirmed. (Cit.)” ’
Rollins v. Great Southwest Fire Ins. Co.,
2. In her second enumeration of error, plaintiff contends the trial court erred in failing to allow her opening and concluding arguments. A review of the trial transcript shows that defendant Kincade was allowed opening and concluding arguments and plaintiff was allowed opening and concluding arguments as to defendant Norman. Plaintiff’s attorney and defendants’ attorneys waived opening arguments and defendant Norman argued first, followed by plaintiff and then defendant Kincade. Plaintiff objected, arguing that she was entitled to opening and concluding arguments by virtue of the fact that defendant Kincade presented evidence at trial.
(a) “In civil actions, where the burden of proof rests with the plaintiff, the plaintiff is entitled to the opening and concluding arguments except that if the defendant introduces no evidence or admits a
prima facie
case, he shall be entitled to open and conclude.” Uniform Rules for the Superior Court Rule 13.4,
In the case sub judice, defendant Kincade’s counsel examined his client after plaintiff called her for cross-examination. No further evidence was offered by defendant Kincade. Defendant Norman was not summoned by plaintiff for cross-examination. However, after the close of plaintiff’s case, defendant Norman presented evidence by testifying on his own behalf.
While the examination of defendant Kincade by her attorney while on the stand after call by plaintiff for cross-examination did not constitute an offer of evidence as to justify denying her the right to opening and concluding arguments,
Hamby v. Hamby,
“Improper denial of the right to open or conclude, where injury results, will work a reversal unless the verdict was demanded by the evidence. [Cits.]”
Gilson v. Mitchell,
(b) Next, we address defendant Norman’s argument that “[t]his enumeration of error does not directly affect [him] because [plaintiff] did have closing as to [defendant Norman].” This reasoning was addressed in
Gilson v. Mitchell,
3. Plaintiff’s argument in support of her third enumeration of error consists of no more than a restatement of the enumeration of error. “That does not constitute an argument in support of the enumeration of error.
Haskins v. Jones,
4. In her fourth, fifth and sixth enumerations of error, plaintiff challenges the trial court’s failure to charge certain of her written requests.
*551 “[I]n all civil cases, no party may complain of . . . the failure to give an instruction to the jury unless he objects thereto before the jury returns its verdict, stating distinctly the matter to which he objects and the grounds of his objection.” OCGA § 5-5-24 (a). Although this Code section also provides that “[objection need not be made with the particularity formerly required of assignments of error and need only be as reasonably definite as the circumstances will permit,” plaintiff’s objection that the trial court erred in failing to charge her written requests numbered, “4, 5, 6, 7, 10, 11, 12 and 15 . . fails to meet the requirements of the statute.
“The mere exception to a failure to give a numbered request to charge fails to meet [the] requirement [of OCGA § 5-5-24 (a)].
U. S. Security Warehouse, Inc. v. Tasty Sandwich Co.,
5. Plaintiff’s seventh enumeration of error is unclear and the argument in support thereof is seemingly unrelated to the enumeration of error. However, an examination of pertinent portions of the trial transcript reveals that plaintiff’s complaint stems from the trial court’s ruling, limiting her attorney’s cross-examination of defendant Norman with regard to identification of a document which purportedly reflects a reproduction of a photograph of defendant Norman’s pickup truck. More specifically, the trial court sustained defendant Norman’s attorney’s objection that “those reproductions are so poor [that] it’s not even reasonable that anybody could say for certain, with any reasonable certainty and with any probative value, that those pictures represent what plaintiff’s counsel obviously is trying to get somebody to tell him it represents.”
“ ‘The question of the sufficiency of the preliminary proofs to identify photographs, or to show that it is a fair or accurate represen
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tation of the objects which it purports to portray, is a question committed to the discretion of the trial judge. (Cits.)’
Johnson v. State,
Judgment reversed.
