Guest Pond Club, Inc. (GPC), the appellee-plaintiff in Case Number 76649, owns property which contains a pond. Several members of the Opatut family (Opatuts), the appellant-defendants in Case No. 76649 and the cross-appelleеs in Case No. 76650, own the property which adjoins that of GPC. Rite-Diet Feeds, Inc. (RDF), also an appellant-defendant in Case No. 76649 and a cross-appellee in Case No. 76650, operates a chicken plant on the Opatuts’ property. Alleging that water used in the chicken plant had been discharged into its pond, GPC brought suit against the Opatuts and RDF to recover damages. The Opatuts and RDF answered, denying the material allegations of GPC’s comрlaint.
The Opatuts and RDF also filed a third-party action against Evanston Insurance Company (Evanston), an appellee in Case No. 76649 and the cross-appellant in Case No. 76650. In their third-party action, the Opatuts and RDF allеged that Evanston was their insurer and *479 that Evanston’s refusal to afford them a defense to GPC’s main action was a breach of their contract of insurance. Evanston answered the third-party complaint and denied the materiаl allegations thereof.
The main action and the third-party action proceeded to trial before a jury. A verdict in favor of GPC was returned in the main action. A verdict in favor of Evanston was returned in the third-party action. In Case No. 76649, the Opatuts and RDF appeal from the judgments which were entered on the jury’s verdicts. In Case No. 76650, Evanston cross-appeals from the judgment which was entered on the jury’s verdict in the third-party action.
Case No. 76649
1. The Opatuts and RDF enumerate as error the trial court’s denial of two of their motions for continuance.
When Joel Opatut, one of the appellant-defendants, was unable to appear in court due to illness, his absence was unsuccessfully urged as a ground for continuance. See OCGA § 9-10-154. A review of the record shows, however, that the trial court had already granted one continuance because of Opatut’s inability to appear in court due to illness. “The [trial] judge had before him the case, the parties, the situation, and the surrounding and attendant circumstances. He declined to grant a second continuance for the absence of the same witness, whо was also a party, and whose evidence could have been taken by [deposition]. . . . [W]e can not say that he erred.”
Gable
v.
Gable,
The Opatuts and RDF were represented at trial by only two of their three attorneys of record. The absence from trial of their third counsel due to illness was also unsuccessfully urged as a ground for continuance. See OCGA § 9-10-155. The record shows, however, that the two attorneys who represented the Opatuts and RDF at trial hаd been primarily responsible for the pre-trial preparation of the case. “Thus, we are not confronted with the situation of an entirely new counsel being presented with a complex case and having absоlutely no familiarity with the case or being totally unprepared. It is apparent that the counsel who did most of the case preparation was present [and tried the case], even though he might not have been the . . . ostensible ‘lead’ counsel. . . . [A] motion for continuance is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court and a denial will not be disturbed in the absence of a manifest abuse of discretion. [Cits.]”
Rutledge v. State,
2. The trial court denied the Opatuts’ and RDF’s request that they be granted additional peremptory strikes in connection with the third-party action against Evanston. This ruling is enumerated as error.
“Where, as here, a third-party claim cаn be severed, OCGA § 9-11-42 (b), the trial court may grant additional strikes to the defendants in the exercise of a legal discretion. [Cits.] A legal discretion ‘ “means a sound discretion, that is to say, a discretion exercised not arbitrarily or wilfully, but with regard to what is right and equitable under the circumstances and the law, and directed by the reason and conscience of the judge to a just result.” [Cits.]’ [Cit.]”
Keller Indus. v. Summers Roofing Co.,
3. A witness for GPC testified on direct examination that he had fished in GPC’s pond numerous times. On cross-examination, the witness was asked it he had ever fished in Bank’s Pond. GPC objected, urging that, in the аbsence of any evidence that the two ponds were similar, inquiry as to Bank’s Pond would be irrelevant. The trial court ruled that GPC’s witnesses could not be cross-examined as to other ponds until there was evidence introduced to show that they were similar to GPC’s. Once this evidence of similarity had been introduced, the trial court ruled that the Opatuts and RDF would then be allowed to recall any of GPC’s witnesses and question them as to the other ponds. The trial cоurt’s ruling is enumerated as an erroneous curtailment of the cross-examination of GPC’s witnesses.
The Opatuts and RDF, “of course, had the right to a thorough and sifting cross-examination of any witness called against [them]. OCGA § 24-9-64 ([cit.]). However, the extent of cross-examination can be curtailed if the inquiry is not relevant or material, and such restriction lies within the discretion of the trial court which will not be disturbed on appeal unless manifestly abused. [Cits.]”
Fitzgerald v. State,
4. During direct examination, a witness for GPC was asked if GPC had the funds to restore the pond to its original condition. The witness replied that GPC had no assets and was in debt. The Opatuts and RDF moved for a mistrial, on the ground that evidence of GPC’s financial condition was irrelevant. The triаl court denied the motion, but did instruct the jury to disregard the testimony. The Opatuts and RDF enumerate the denial of their motion for a mistrial as error.
“ ‘Where illegal evidence is admitted at the trial, it is not error to refuse the grant of mistrial if the illegal or harmful testimony can be corrected by proper instructions to the jury . . . [Cits.] The decision not to declare a mistrial is within the discretion of the trial court, and this discretion should not be interfered with unless manifestly abused.’ [Cit.]”
Chandler v. State,
5. The Opatuts and GPC moved for a mistrial, on the ground that GPC’s counsel had violated the “Golden Rulе” in his closing argument. The trial court denied the motion and this ruling is enumerated as error.
A review of the transcript shows that GPC’s attorney was merely flamboyantly arguing the facts of the case and that he at no point urged “the jurors to рlace themselves in the position of [GPC] or to allow such recovery as they would wish if in the same position. [Cit.]”
Earl v. Edwards,
6. At the outset of its charge to the jury, the trial court read the contentions of all of the parties in the casе. The Opatuts and RDF enumerate this portion of the trial court’s charge as error.
“The trial court made it clear to the jury that the allegations were merely the contention[s] of the [parties], [and that they] were not evidence. ... It is not improper in a charge to the jury to state the contentions [of the parties], even though some of the contentions be unsupported by the evidence. [Cit.]”
Ledbetter Bros. v. Holmes,
7. The Opatuts and RDF moved for directed verdict against Evanston. The denial of their motion is enumerated as error.
“The directing of a verdict is a ‘very, very, grave matter’ [cit.],
*482
and as a vehicle of justice, is proper only where ‘there is no issue of (material) fact, or unless the proved facts, viewed from every possible legal point, would sustain no other finding than the one so directed.’ [Cit.]”
Able-Craft v. Bradshaw,
8. The trial court’s giving of two of Evanston’s requested jury instructions is enumerated as error, the contentions being that the instructions were argumentative, were not adjusted to the evidence, were incorrect statements of the law, and were prejudicial. A review of the contested instructions reveals, however, that they are not subject to the objections urged by the Opatuts and RDF. Accordingly, these enumerations are without merit.
9. GPC called Paul King as a rebuttal witness. The Opatuts and RDF objected on the ground that, after they had made a pre-trial identification of King as one of their expert witnesses, GPC had made “ex parte” contact with him in violation of § 9-11-26 (b) (4). The trial court overruled the objection and allowed King to testify as a rebuttal witnеss for GPC. This ruling is enumerated as error, the contention being that the trial court should have excluded King’s testimony as a sanction against GPC for improper discovery methods.
Trial courts have broad discretionary powers under the discovery provisions of the Civil Practice Act and appellate courts have consistently refused to interfere with the exercise of a trial court’s discretion except in cases of clear abuse. See generally
Rucker v. Blakey,
10. The Opatuts and RDF enumerate as error the trial court’s allowing of Evanstоn to participate in the trial of the main action.
OCGA § 9-11-14 (a) provides that “[t]he third-party defendant may assert against the plaintiff any defenses which the third-party plaintiff has to the plaintiff’s claim.” Since Evanston would be liable to GPC only if the Opatuts and RDF were found to have caused damage to GPC’s property, Evanston was clearly entitled to assert the Opatuts’ and RDF’s lack of liability as a defense to the main action. Accordingly, the trial court did nоt err in allowing Evanston to participate in the trial of the main action.
11. The trial court did not err in entering judgment on the jury’s verdicts in the main action and in the third-party action.
Case No. 76650
12. Evanston’s cross-appeal is moot by virtue of our affirmance in the main appeal of the judgment on the third-party action.
Judgment affirmed in Case No. 76649.
