This is the second appearance of the case sub judice before this court. Upon remand to the trial court following our decision in
Pounds v. Hosp. Auth. of Gwinnett County,
In an order entered on January 5, 1990, the trial court found that the duration of the contract in question was three-and-one-half years ending on July 20, 1986. A trial as to the issue of damages was set for January 31, 1990, and the trial court directed that all discovery on matters of damages should be concluded on or before January 30, 1990.
Plaintiff was being deposed on January 29, 1990, when he revealed that he was in the process of obtaining certain computer records which would show most, if not all, of the secondary transports in Gwinnett County for the years 1981 and 1982. The plaintiff intended to extrapolate his damages for the three-and-one-half year period at issue from this data. Plaintiff’s deposition stated that he did not realize he had the computer documents until shortly before the date of the deposition. The computer system from which the documents were being taken was not in use at that time and no one present at the deposition had seen the computer records. Consequently, the deposition was suspended until it could be completed by asking plaintiff questions concerning the computer records and the connection of those records to plaintiff’s loss of profits.
On January 30, 1990, plaintiff’s counsel received print-outs of the computer records and transmitted them via facsimile (fax) to defendant’s counsel. Contemporaneously, plaintiff’s counsel telephoned defense counsel and offered plaintiff for completion of his deposition. Plaintiff’s deposition was not reconvened. On January 31, 1990, the originals of the computer records (which had been transmitted the previous day) were hand delivered to defense counsel along with trip tickets which were corroborative of the computer print-outs.
When the parties convened before the trial court on January 31,
1. “In order to establish lost profits, the jury must be provided with information or data sufficient to enable them to estimate the amount of the loss with reasonable certainty.
Brock v. D. O. T.,
2. The trial court erred in refusing to allow plaintiff to voluntarily dismiss his case without prejudice. The bifurcated procedure in the case sub judice appears to result in the presentation of a first impression question under the 1985 amendment to OCGA § 9-11-41 (a) (Ga. L. 1985, p. 546, §1). Under this statute as amended, and subject to some exceptions not relevant to the case sub judice, “an action may be dismissed by the plaintiff, without order or permission of court, by
“[T]he inescapable conclusion is that the legislative intent behind the enactment of OCGA § 9-11-41 (a) was to afford a plaintiff, faced with a contrary verdict or other untenable position, a second chance to litigate his suit
despite
the inconvenience and irritation to the defendant.”
Griggs v. Columbus Bank &c. Co.,
Judgment reversed.
