This is an action commenced in the City Court of Ludowici for personal injuries and property damage. An automobile operated by the defendant, Dewey Nail, struck the rear end of an automobile operated by the plaintiff, Robbie Lanier, now Robbie Lanier Hiers, while it was stopped in a line of traffic on a street in Jesup, Ga. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $12,000, shown • to include $2,000 for property damage; judgment was rendered accordingly, and the defendant appeals from the order overruling his motion for new trial. Held:
1. The first two enumerated errors concern objections to the proof of property damage based on the testimony of the plaintiff, and as we view these enumerated errors, they raise three questions: Is harmful error shown by the fact that the trial court allowed counsel for the plaintiff to read a paragraph of the petition, showing the basis for the claim for property damage, and then to ask the plaintiff if the statements were true, to which she replied affirmatively, over objection that counsel was leading his witness? Is the testimony of the plaintiff admissible as evidence of market value? If
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admissible, will it support a verdict including property damage? Aside from the testimony of the plaintiff affirming her claim as alleged in the petition, that immediately before the collision her automobile, a 1965 Buick Skylark sport coupe, was worth $3,286, and that immediately thereafter it was worth $1,275, entitled her to recover $2,011, it is clear from her other testimony that she bought the automobile as new two days before the collision for $3,286, that at the time of the collision it had a recorded mileage of 104.6 miles, and that after the collision her stepfather solicited bids for it and sold it in its damaged condition. Asked how much he received for it, she said, “I think it was twelve seventy five.” She also stated the rear end was crumpled, and that the damaged vehicle could not be driven away from the scene of the collision. Under the circumstances here shown, even if it be conceded that the trial court improperly allowed counsel to lead his witness by reading from the petition, any error in this respect was harmless, for the evidence adduced was merely cumulative and established nothing more than was shown by her other testimony, by which she sought to establish the value of her automobile before the collision as the actual purchase price, and the value after the collision by the actual- salvage price, and a claim for the difference. In two recent cases this court reviewed the admissibility of testimony of before and after market value of automobiles damaged in collisions, and recognized the admissibility of opinion evidence of market value by the owner if the witness shows a sufficient foundation for his opinion.
Taber Pontiac, Inc. v. Osborne,
2. The remaining three enumerated errors are without merit.
3. The defendant having obtained substantial relief as the appellant in this court, the costs of bringing the appeal to this court are properly taxed against the appellee.
Code
§ 6-1704;
Hartley v. Hartley,
Judgment affirmed on condition that the plaintiff write off $2,000 as recovery for property damage, otherwise reversed. The costs of bringing the case to this court are taxed against the appellee.
