27 Ga. App. 470 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1921
(After stating the foregoing facts.) 1. No error appears in the rulings of the trial court on the demurrers filed to the petition. The allegations of the petition clearly, fully, and distinctly set forth a cause of action against the Reed Oil Company, either severally or jointly with the other two defendants, and were entirely sufficient to withstand a general demur
2. The colloquy between the court and counsel, set out. in the motion for a new trial, was not cause for a new trial. Trial judges have the right to overrule motions without hearing argument, if they do not desire to hear argument. While the overruling of the motion to direct k verdict for the defendant, without hearing argument in support of the motion, may have tended to prejudice the case of the movant before the jury, such prejudicial consequence must be attributed to the conduct of the attorney in making the motion in the presence of the jury. Any prejudicial eifect from the ruling on a motion can be easily prevented by counsel, before he presents the motion to the court, by requesting that the jury be ordered to retire while the motion is being submitted or argued.
3. The charge of the court in eifect that the defendant oil company was not authorized to take possession of the car in question for any purpose without first having paid the draft or without having obtained the permission of the shipper, the shipment being what is ordinarily called an “ order notify ” shipment, was correct. Southern Ry. Co. v. Hodgson Brothers Co., 148 Ga. 851 (98 S. E. 541); Southern Ry. Co. v. Massee & Felton Lumber Co., 23 Ga. App. 309 (98 S. E. 106); Merchants & Miners Transportation Co. v. Moore, 124 Ga. 482 (52 S. E. 802).
4. The refusal to give the requested instructions was not erroneous for any of the reasons stated; the charge having fully and correctly applied the law to the facts of the ease.
5. This leaves in the case only the main question, as to whether there is evidence in the record sufficient to support the verdict. The negligence alleged against the Reed Oil Company, upon which the verdict is probably based, was, first, the act of the president instructing its employee to take possession of the tank-car and inspect the contents before it was delivered by the railroad company in accordance with the bill of lading, and the manner in which that unauthorized act was performed by the employee. The evidence is undisputed that in attempting .to enter the car and find out its contents this employee violated the express order of the interstate-commerce commission that “the dome cover should not be hammered and should not be unscrewed
Judgment affirmed.