33 Ga. App. 383 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1925
1. On a former bill of exceptions it was held that the petition for damages against the defendant street-railway companj', on account of personal injuries to the plaintiff in being run down by an automobile while attempting to board the defendant’s car, set forth a cause of action’ by reason of the alleged negligence of the defendant company in requiring its passengers to enter on the left side of its cars (despite the fact that a city ordinance required vehicles in meeting street-cars to pass on this, the left, side of the car, and prohibited such vehicles, in following streetcars on the right side, to pass them, but required them' to come to a stop while a street-car was engaged in putting off or taking on passengers), and in carrying a peculiarly dazzling electric headlight, contrary to a city ordinance. See 30 Ga. App. 231 (117 S. E. 464), where a statement of the facts and contentions in the ease is set forth.
2. It is the settled general rule that a trial judge, whether requested in writing or not, should give to the jury appropriate in
3. A correct charge is not to be characterized as erroneous because of an omission by the court to charge in the same connection an additional pertinent legal proposition. Tucker v. Cen. of Ga. Ry. Co., 122 Ga. 387 (5) (50 S. E. 128); Wilson v. Small, 28 Ga. App. 587, 591, 592 (113 S. E. 328); International Cotton Mills v. Mobley, 30 Ga. App. 781 (5), 783 (119 S. E. 467); Lovelace v. Reliable Garage, ante, 289 (125 S. E. 877). Accordingly, “an exception to a correct charge because of failure to give in the same connection some other pertinent legal proposition is not a good assignment of error.” Hicks v. State, 146 Ga. 221 (6) (91 S. E. 57). But such an instruction should'be in itself “complete, accurate, and pertinent” with reference to the particular legal rule stated, and “where the judge undertakes to charge upon a certain subject, although it be one upon which it is unnecessary, in the absence of a request, to instruct the jury, he must charge all the law upon that subject that is material to the facts of the case.” Persons v. State, 27 Ga. App. 592 (3) (109 S. E. 533); Lucas v. State, 110 Ga. 756 (36 S. E. 87); Savannah Electric Co. v. Thomas, 30 Ga. App. 405, 418 (118 S. E. 481).
The grounds of the defendant’s motion for new trial dealt with in this division of the opinion involve an application of the foregoing general principles.
(a) Exception is taken in ground 4 to the foEowing excerpt:
(&) “Where there is a conflict between the bill of exceptions and the record as to matters which form a part of the record, the latter will control.” West v. Embree, 146 Ga. 653 (1), 654 (92 S. E. 64); 4 Stevens’ Dig. Ga. R. 3103. Ground 5 complains of the following charge: “The law authorizes you, if you see fit to do so, to take into consideration the witnesses’ manner and demeanor on the stand, their interest or want of interest in the case, the opportunity they may have to know the fact about which they testify,
(c) Exception is taken _in the 9th and 11th grounds to the failure to charge that “plaintiff could not recover upon any acts of negligence other than those set out in her petition,” and that “defendant was bound to show the exercise of ordinary care only in respect to those acts which were alleged in plaintiff’s petition to be negligence.” Such an omission, in the absence of written request, can not be taken as error. Savannah & Atlanta Ry. v. Rowell, 28 Ga. App. 191 (1) (110 S. E. 513). The charge complained of in the 10th ground,-—“Look and see whether the defendant railway company used toward her (the plaintiff) this ordinary care; if they did, stop there and find for the defendant; if it did not, see what its negligence consisted of,”—could not, in view of the language immediately following,—“and whether she, by the exercise of ordinary care on her own part, could have avoided the injury to herself, if she was injured,” etc.,—and the preceding language specifically charging the contentions of the pleadings, reasonably have been taken by the jury as referring to anything except the issues actually raised; nor does it appear how that instruction, even if erroneous, could, under any evidence, have been injurious to the defendant.
(d) The 15th, 16th, 17th, and 21st grounds complain of the failure of the court to define the meaning of the term “proximate cause,” to charge the legal rules contained in sections 4508, 4509, and 4510 of the Civil Code (1910), and to explain their application to these questions and issues as raised by the amended answer. The court, however, did charge substantially in the language of the defendant’s pleading. It “was not error as against the defendant for the trial judge to follow the phraseology of the defendant’s plea” (Woodbridge v. Drought, 118 Ga. 671 (6), 45 S. E. 266), in view of the essentially accurate instructions given with reference thereto. Under the rule stated in the 2d division of the syllabus, there was no error in failing to define “proximate cause,” or in not further elaborating the application of the term to the particular issues of the case, in the absence of a written request.
4. The 12th, 7th and 8th grounds of the motion for a new trial are dealt with together in the brief of learned counsel for plaintiff in error. The 12th ground complains of this excerpt from the
5. Exception is taken in the 13th and 14th grounds to the following excerpts: “If you should find that the direct and proximate cause of this injury was not the negligence of the defendant, but was a separate intervening cause generated by a third party, then I charge you in that event the plaintiff could not recover.” “If there was no direct and proximate cause, because of a separate intervening third party, the mere fact a third party may have been negligent, perhaps equally negligent with the defendant railway company, if the defendant railway company was negligent, would not bar the right of the plaintiff to sue the defendant railway company for her injuries, provided it was liable. In other words, if two different parties injure a person and both are equally liable under the rules of law I have given you, if both are negligent, and both might be held liable for the injury, the plaintiff might sue one or both and recover, provided they are liable under the rules of law I have given you in charge, and provided the negligence of one is not the direct and proximate cause of the injury.” It is contended that these instructions were erroneous in that they “put upon the defendant the double burden of showing not only that the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury was not the negligence of the defendant, but also the additional burden of showing that the proximate cause of the injury was a separate intervening cause generated by a third party,” whereas “the finding by the jury of either of these two facts disjunctively was legally sufficient to prevent a recovery,” that the defendant could defeat a recovery by showing that “its own negligence was not the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury;” and that the second excerpt was confused and misleading, and “did not submit intelligently to the jury the issue upon the question of proximate cause made by the pleadings and by the evidence.” The defendant’s original
C. It is conceded in the supplemental brief of counsel that the 19th and 20th grounds are insufficient, and these are abandoned. The exceptions taken in the 22d ground, complaining of the omission of an instruction on the question as to “whether defendant could or could not have anticipated the negligent acts on the part of said automobile driver,” and of an instruction that “if such acts could not have been anticipated, then defendant would not be liable,” are without merit, under the principles already discussed. In our opinion, the charge of the trial judge was full and fair; and he having refused a new trial upon the finding by the jury on the facts, this court does not feel authorized to set the verdict aside on any of the legal assignments made.
Judgment affirmed.