This is а dog bite case. Plaintiff was injured by defendant’s security dog when he went to defendant’s place of business to borrow a tool.
The jury returned a verdict in favor of defendant. Plaintiff appeals, contending the trial court errеd in charging on the status of licensee and failing to chаrge on punitive damages. Held:
1. The record shows that plaintiff failed to object to the trial court’s charge оn the status of a licensee prior to return of verdict by the jury pursuant to Code Ann. § 70-207 (a) (Ga. L. 1965, pp. 18, 31; 1966, pp. 493, 498;
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1968, pp. 1072, 1078). This еnumeration cannot be considered due to plaintiffs failure to make timely objections to the charge at trial.
Atlanta Commercial Builders, Inc. v. Polinsky,
2. Prior to counsels’ arguments to the jury, the trial cоurt discussed the requests to charge with counsel and informеd counsel of its proposed action upon thе requests dealing with several issues. Arguments were made to the jury and court was recessed until the following day. At that time а colloquy occurred between the trial court аnd counsel. Defendant moved to exclude from the consideration of the jury any issue as to punitive damages. Acting affirmatively on this motion the trial court omitted from its charge to the jury, the issue of punitive damages which it had еarlier planned to give in charge to the jury.
Plaintiff objеcted to the omission of the punitive damages issue from the charge after counsel had made their arguments to the jury, but did not request to reargue his case to the jury. See in this regard
Daniels v. State,
We find no direct statement by the trial court prior to counsel’s argument to the jury indicating the trial court’s decision as to whether or not he intended to charge on punitive damages. If counsel has been told nothing he could not have been misled. If there was within the colloquy, between trial court and counsel prior to argument, some gratuitous indication that the trial court intended to charge on the issue of punitive damagеs, we
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see no reason that the rule as set forth in
Daniels v. State,
But in all events, the verdict was for the defendant, hence punitive damages would not lie when no other damages are recovered.
Haugabrook v. Taylor,
Judgment affirmed.
