113 Ga. 627 | Ga. | 1901
An action was brought in the superior court of Telfair county, against the railroad company, by Radford and his wife, for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by her in alighting from a train of the defendant upon which she was a passenger. Subsequently this action was by the plaintiffs dismissed, and renewed within less than six months. It came on for trial at the October term, 1900, of that court, and a verdict was rendered in favor of the defendant. The plaintiffs made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and they excepted. The controlling ground of that motion is based upon alleged error in refusing to admit in evidence the answers to certain interrogatories, embracing pertinent and material testimony, which had at the instance of the plaintiffs been sued out, duly executed, and returned while the original suit was pending, and which had been read in evidence on a trial thereof at the close of which the action was voluntarily dismissed. This testimony was rejected solely “ on the ground that these interrogatories were not sued out in the present suit,” the court holding that “ interrogatories taken and used in the trial of former suit, of which the present suit was a renewal, were not admissible.” We think the court erred in rejecting the testimony. In Gaulden v. Shehee, 24 Ga. 438, this court decided that, “Where two suits are pending between the same parties, upon separate
The following from 6 Enc. PI. & Pr. 579 —581, is pertinent in this connection: “ The rule is that depositions taken in one suit-can not be used in another suit, unless the parties are the same or are in privity and the subject-matter involved is also .the same; but-when a deposition is taken in a suit other than the one in which it is offered, it is nevertheless admissible if it appears that the parties and the subject-matter are the same in both suits, and that the party against whom it is proposed to introduce the deposition had an
Judgment reversed.