7 S.E.2d 747 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1940
Lead Opinion
The court did not err in overruling the motion for new trial.
In the outset we say that the evidence supported a recovery; and we can not say, since the plaintiffs in error fail to show bias or prejudice on the part of the jury, that the sum recovered was excessive. The fact that a jury on a former trial found in a like sum lends support to this view. The judgment must stand, unless errors of law appear.
In ground 5 the plaintiffs in error complain of the charge to the jury on the ascertainment of the proper gross sum to be found for alleged impairment of earning capacity, reducible to a present worth at seven per cent., to wit: "One of the elements of damages claimed in which you are asked to fix a certain amount is by reason of facts alleged in the petition that the plaintiff's ability to labor *58
and earn any amount has been reduced at least fifty per cent. She claims that she was capable and did earn by her labor and earnings at least one dollar per day. If you should fix a certain amount of damages for earnings, it must be based on a cash value of this date on a basis of money being worth seven per cent. . . If you should find that the plaintiff is otherwise entitled to recover, and is entitled to recover as alleged for her diminution in her ability to labor, in that case then it would be your duty to fix, as I say, a gross amount in which there is no rule of law that you can be guided by saying what the fixed amount should be; and when you have fixed a gross amount, it should be reduced to its cash value on a basis of seven per cent. And you must also take into consideration that a person rarely ever labors every day in the year, that there will be some of the time when they can't labor, or as they grow older their ability to labor will be decreased. All of those questions are questions that the jury has to settle themselves." Error is assigned in that this excerpt was not correct as an abstract proposition of law, and was too general in effect, and, in light of the instruction, "there is no rule of law that you can be guided by saying what the fixed amount should be," that the jury were left to fix capriciously any amount they chose for "diminution of earning capacity, without regard to the plaintiff's expectancy in life or her earning capacity before and after the alleged injuries," and were thus "turned loose without chart or compass . . to fix any amount" they chose, regardless of the evidence and rules of law applicable thereto. Under the ruling of this court when the case was formerly before us, we must hold that the excerpt complained of, though general, was sufficient in particulars to come within that rule. Had a more specific charge been desired in the particulars indicated in the assignment of error, a timely written request should have been made. Merchants MinersTransportation Co. v. Corcoran,
The assignment of error in ground 6 is without merit. A careful comparison of all the excerpts from the charge brought under review by this assignment with all such excerpts from the charge to the jury on the former trial in the light of therulings of the court working a reversal in the former case, discloses that none of the errors formerly made were repeated and no new errors were committed. While it is true that the excerpt under review in the former case as working a reversal, to wit, "If you should find there was negligence on the part of both parties, that is negligence on the part of the plaintiff and defendants, but that the negligence of the defendants exceeded the negligence of the plaintiff, your finding would be in favor of the plaintiff, but you would reduce your finding in favor of the plaintiff so as to equal the amount of negligence attributable to the plaintiff," was given again almost verbatim, nevertheless it must now be considered in its interrelation with the entire charge, as corrected, the court having in the charge as a whole fully instructed the jury that the defendants' alleged negligence must have been the proximate cause of the injury. So considered, no error appears.
Exception is taken to the refusal of a request to give a charge couched in the identical language of a request made inMetropolitan Street Railroad Co. v. Johnson,
The remaining assignments of error are without merit.
Judgment affirmed. MacIntyre, J., concurs.
Dissenting Opinion
I think the court committed reversible error in refusing a timely written request to charge the following: "The precise thing which every person is bound to do before stepping upon a railroad-track is that which every prudent person would do under like circumstances. If prudent persons would look and listen, so must every one else, or take the consequences so far as the consequences might have been avoided by that means." The identical request to charge was denied on the trial of Metropolitan Street R. Co. v. Johnson,