This is a wrongful death action for the death of plaintiff Ogle-tree’s husband, who died as a result of injuries he sustained when a truck backed into him. Defendant Navistar International Transportation Corporation manufactured the cab and chassis of the vehicle and defendant Newton Crouch, Inc. installed a fertilizer spreader onto the truck chassis. The complaint alleges both defendants had a duty to design and manufacture their respective parts of the vehicle with due care for the safety of persons in the path of rearward movement of the vehicle. The complaint alleges both defendants breached that duty by failing to install an audible back-up alarm on the vehicle.'
In the first appearance of this case before this court, we reversed the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to defendant Navistar. I
Ogletree v. Navistar Intl. Transp. Corp.,
1. Both defendants argue the law of the case rule does not require our initial opinion in this case to control the issues raised in their respective motions for summary judgment. “A decision by the [appellate court] is controlling upon the judge of the trial court, as well as upon the [appellate court] when the case reaches that court a second time. The principle in the decision may be reviewed and overruled in another case between different parties, but as between the parties the decision stands as the law of the case, even though the ruling has been disapproved . . . before the second appearance of the case in that court.”
Western & Atlantic R. Co. v. Third Nat. Bank of Atlanta,
Both defendants cite this court’s opinion in
Hart v. Eldridge,
2. Defendant Newton Crouch further argues that the law of th( case rule does not preclude summary judgment in its favor because if was not a party to the first appeal and should not be bound by it] However, “[a] 11 parties to the proceedings in the lower court
shall bt
parties on appeal and shall be served with a copy of the notice o] appeal. . . .” OCGA § 5-6-37. “The . . . language of the [statute] i| all-inclusive and mandatory, with no exceptions provided.”
Munday v. Brissette,
The rule does not apply, however, when the evidentiary postur] of the case changes after the initial ruling of the appellate court
Modern Roofing &c. v. Owen,
Judgments affirmed.
