Mandatory Joinder of Cases. The facts giving rise to this appeal show that on August 28, 1983, the appellant Michael Robinson was driving his auto with his wife, appellant Janice Robinson, as a passenger. The Robinsons allege in their separate complaints that the appellee Hall turned the vehicle being operated by Hall into the path of the vehicle operated by Michael Robinson. The inevitable collision resulted in injuries to both the Robinsons as well as to Hall. Each of the Robinsons filed a separate lawsuit against Hall to which he counterclaimed, along with a claim filed on behalf of Mrs. Hall for loss of consortium, as derivative to Hall’s counterclaim for injuries.
After the various complaints and cross-complaints had been filed, Hall moved the trial court to join as one the two separate suits of the Robinsons, citing as authority the provisions of OCGA § 9-11-19 and arguing that separate suits would subject him to substantial risk of incurring double, multiple or otherwise inconsistent obligations by reason of the two claims made against him; whereas joinder would promote judicial economy by eliminating the requirement that one accident case be tried twice, and avoid loss of public trust in the event two separate juries hearing the same evidence might reach different results.
The trial court, apparently persuaded by the logic of the argument, joined the husband-wife suits as one. Each of the Robinsons petitioned this court for an interlocutory appeal, complaining the
OCGA § 9-11-42 (a) provides: “(a) Consolidation. When actions involving a common question of law or fact are pending before the court, if the parties consent, the court may order a joint hearing or trial of any or all the matters in issue in the actions; it may order all the actions consolidated; and it may make such orders concerning proceedings therein as may tend to avoid unnecessary costs or delay.”
Notwithstanding the apparent broad discretion of the trial court to consolidate separate actions containing the same issues, the Supreme Court consistently has required a showing of consent by the litigating parties. In the germinative case interpreting the consolidation statute, Carter v. Witherspoon,
Hall looks to a yet more recent decision of the Supreme Court as authority for a consolidation even in the absences of the consent of the parties. Stapleton v. Palmore,
Lastly, we note that Mrs. Robinson objected to consolidation on the ground that while her husband’s complaint might be subject to the legal issue of comparative negligence, her husband’s comparative negligence could not be attributed to her as a passenger; though it must be conceded that if her injuries were caused solely by her husband’s negligence to the exclusion of Hall, that issue would be legitimate in her case. Still this would not allow evidence of comparative negligence to be admissible in her independent suit for damages she suffered in the collision.
Our OCGA §§ 9-11-19 and 9-11-42 were patterned after the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and we can consider similar issues resolved under that Act. Worley v. Worley,
We conclude that under the circumstances of this case, consolidation of the separate lawsuits, though arising out of the same accident, required the consent of the parties. As noted this result imposes no more harsh a result than individual suits against joint tortfeasors who may be both jointly and severally liable. See North Car. Nat. Bank v. Peoples Bank,
In the absence of consent by the parties, it was error for the trial court to consolidate separate actions possibly raising separate issues even though rising out of the same auto accident.
Judgment reversed.
