Wrongful death action. In November, 1981, Gregory Heffernan was invited by his girl friend, Susan Reed, to go to her home in Knoxville, Tennessee, for the Thanksgiving holiday. Susan was a student at the University of Georgia. She drove her car from Athens to Knoxville with Heffernan as a passenger. Heffernan drove her car on the return trip from Knoxville to Athens. The return journey was driven in rainy conditions. When arriving at the outskirts of Demorest in north Georgia, and while rounding a curve, the Reed vehicle left the right lane, crossed the middle line and crashed head-on into an oncoming car. Susan Reed suffered fatal injuries to which she succumbed about a week after the accident. Reed’s parents brought a wrongful death action against Heffernan alleging various acts of negligence. Heffernan defended on the premise that because of the wet road conditions, the lack of adequate tread on the front tires and the right curve around which he was negotiating, the car hydroplaned through no negligence of his and thus the death resulted wholly from an accident.
The jury received full and correct instructions on injuries resulting from negligent driving as well as a charge on accident. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Heffernan. The trial court made the verdict of the jury its judgment.
The Reeds bring this appeal enumerating seven alleged errors, four dealing with the admission of testimony, one relating to the charge of the court on accident, and two relating to issues involving damages. Held:
1. In enumerations 1, 2, 4 and 7, the Reeds complain the trial court erred in allowing allegedly improper and harmful evidence before the jury.
*84 (a) During the trial of the case, Heffernan was allowed to call a police officer from Demorest and present evidence that the curve at which the accident occurred, known as the “Demorest Curve,” was more dangerous than others in the vicinity and that accidents similar to the Reed accident had occurred on that same curve. Appellants objected to the testimony on hearsay grounds because the officer testified from an accident report that he personally did not prepare and of which he was not the custodian. Furthermore, it is asserted that evidence of a different accident was irrelevant and prejudicially harmful to appellant’s case.
The police officer testified that the accident report was prepared on a standard form, that such a form was prepared at every accident investigation, and that the form was required to be filled out to reflect the facts and circumstances of the accident as observed by the investigator. The report was then filed in the police office and accessible to all the police personnel. Thus there was no particular “Custodian” of the records in that all the officers in the station maintained and used the records. The trial judge overruled the objections raised concluding that the report was prepared in the regular course of business and qualified as a business record. He also concluded that under the peculiar circumstances of the small office in Demorest, the officer in effect qualified as a custodian of the records.
Any individual who is familiar with the method of keeping records and can identify them may lay the foundation required by OCGA § 24-3-14 (b).
Cotton v. John W. Eshelman & Sons,
Moreover, we find no error in the admission of the evidence of a separate accident at the same curve. The facts of the subsequent accident show the same curve, a wet day, and a car sliding across the centerline. Even though the facts showed that the accident was caused by a car proceeding in the northbound direction rather than in *85 the south, as in the present case, the court held there was substantial similarity. The trial court allowed the evidence for the limited purpose of showing the potential for a hydroplane accident occurring on that curve.
Such evidence is the substantial equivalent of a scientific test designed to show the probability of an incident occurring in the way asserted by an expert. Indeed an expert had testified that on a wet day on that same curve and at an established speed, hydroplaning did in fact occur. Heffernan had presented his explanation that the cause of the accident was unexpected and accidental by hydroplaning. Thus, the evidence was considered by the trial court to relate to the probability or improbability of hydroplaning and was admitted only upon a showing of relevancy and similarity to the questioned accident. The relevancy of other occurrences and thus the admissibility of such evidence lies within the sound discretion of the trial court, and may have probative value if the conditions of the other occurrence are substantially similar and may explain the occurrence under examination by the jury.
Georgia Cotton Oil Co. v. Jackson,
(b) During direct examination of the appellee Heffernan, he was asked, after fully developing all that he could remember of the accident, whether there was anything he could have done to avoid the accident. Heffernan answered he could have done nothing further. This answer was made the subject of objection on the ground that the answer invaded the province of the jury.
Standing in isolation, Heffernan’s statement to the effect he had done all he could to avoid the accident probably would have invaded the province of the jury as to that ultimate issue. However, the jury had heard evidence that it was raining, there was running water on a sloping and sharp curve. Heffernan had slowed the car at that curve and was driving at less than the established speed limit. The curve was one of the sharpest between the mountains and Demorest. Heffernan stated he was even unaware that his vehicle was hydroplaning and he perceived that the on-coming car was driving into his lane. It was only after the development of all these facts that Heffernan was *86 asked if there was anything further he could have done to avoid the accident. Thus, the jury was enabled to evaluate Heffernan’s opinion that in addition to what he had done leading up to the accident, he was unaware of what further he could have done to avoid the accident.
As was held in
Bentley v. Ayers,
(c) Appellants also contend the trial court erred in allowing evidence that Susan Reed’s parents were divorced. However, one of the contentions of the appellants was that they were entitled to $900,000 in damages for the value of their daughter’s life, including the value of her services. The value of a child’s services should be determined from all the evidence, including the circumstances of the family and the living conditions.
Collins v. McPherson,
2. The Reeds urge error in the charge of the trial court on the
*87
issue of legal accident. Appellants argue that insofar as their evidence is concerned, it is immaterial whether the car hydroplaned, for even if so, it was caused by Heffernan’s negligence in driving too fast on a wet road with inadequate tires. What appellants ignore is that the jury was fully charged as to the issue of negligence and was told that an incident must be wholly free from negligence or it cannot be a legal accident. Heffernan’s testimony raised an issue of operation of the car within the speed limit and in a careful and prudent manner with the slide occurring wholly without warning and wholly without his control. It was for the jury to determine that issue. Where the jury is authorized under the alternatives submitted by the evidence to find that the collision was not proximately caused by negligence but could have resulted from an unforeseen or unexplained cause, there is ample reason to give a charge on the law of accident.
Chadwick v. Miller,
3. In enumerations of error 5 and 6, the Reeds complain the trial court erred in sustaining a motion to dismiss an issue of damages based upon pain and suffering, and in refusing to admit medical testimony dealing with damages.
There can be no merit to either of these enumerations. Inasmuch as the verdict as to liability was in favor of the defendant Heffernan and we have found no error in that verdict, there can be no harmful error on the issue of damages.
Knight v. Atlanta Transit Systems,
Judgment affirmed.
