Lead Opinion
This is a wrongful death áction initiated by the appellant to recover damages for the death of her 17-year-old son, who was killed when a pick-up truck he was driving collided with a truck driven by appellee Curtis Smith and owned by appellee Coastal Boilers, Inc. The evidence at trial was very much in conflict. The appellant contended that her son was hit from the rear, while the appellees contended that the collision was head-on. The jury returned a verdict for the appellees, and this appeal followed from the denial of the appellant’s motion for new trial. Held:
1. The court did not err in charging the jury on the theory of accident. Although we cannot agree with the appellees that the issue of accident was set forth in the pleadings (the appellees consistently alleged in their amended answer that the collision resulted from the decedent’s negligence), there was some evidence at trial from which the jury could have concluded that neither party was at fault. "In searching the record to find whether or not there was evidence authorizing the charge on the law relative to accident, we must keep in mind that: 'To warrant the court in charging the jury on a given topic, ... it is not necessary that the evidence should shine upon it with a clear light. It is enough if glimpses of it be afforded by the evidence.’ ” Cobb v. Big Apple &c., Inc.,
2. It is contended that the court committed reversible error in charging the jury that the appellant
3. We find no harm in the court’s refusal to charge the provisions of Code Ann. § 68A-804, which gives local governments the authority to reduce the state speed on state highways below the normal 55 miles per hour where a determination is made that conditions warrant such a reduction. It is highly unlikely either that a reasonable juror would question that local authorities have such power or that the issue contributed to the verdict one way or the other.
4. The fourth enumeration of error is deemed abandoned for failure to provide argument or citation of authority in support thereof. See Rule 18 (c) (2) (Code Ann. § 24-3618 (c) (2)).
5. The final enumeration of error is directed towards the exclusion of a deposition which the appellant offered as evidence for the purpose of establishing the mechanical condition of the vehicle which the decedent was driving. The deponent was the owner of the vehicle. Since being deposed he had moved; however, there was no competent evidence showing where he resided at the time of trial or indicating that the appellant had made any effort to locate him.
Code Ann. § 81A-132 (a) (3) provides for the use of a deposition as evidence at trial under certain specified circumstances, all of which deal with the witness’s unavailability to testify. Since the appellant failed to
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
In this wrongful death case I concur fully with the majority opinion finding no error in its consideration of the alleged errors in Divisions 2, 3, 4 and 5. However, I cannot agree that the trial court was authorized to charge the jury on the theory of accident.
Plaintiffs decedent was naturally unavailable to testify as to how the collision of the motor vehicles occurred. The petition alleged that the collision occurred when the defendant driver of a tractor-trailer (operated by the driver in the course of the owner’s business) approached the vehicle (pickup) driven by the decedent "at a high rate of speed and struck said pickup in the rear.” The defendants denied that the collision occurred in this manner but averred that the decedent was guilty of negligence in entering a highway without yielding the right-of-way to all vehicles approaching on the roadway. By amendment defendants contend the collision was unavoidable "insofar as the defendants are concerned” as the defendant driver could not by the exercise of ordinary care avoid the negligent acts of the decedent who created a perilous situation and proximately caused the collision in question, and "insofar as the defendants are concerned, the collision in question was an unavoidable accident.” During the trial the defendant driver testified that as he
At no time have the defendants claimed this was an accident, that is, that neither party was negligent. Defendants clearly contend they were not negligent, although they do claim the collision was unavoidable "insofar as defendants are concerned.”
The proper use of the term "accident” excludes negligence, that is, without fault or carelessness or want of proper circumspection of the person affected or which could not have been avoided by the use of that kind and degree of care necessary to the exigency and in the circumstances in which the person was placed. See Code § 102-103. Richter v. Atlantic Co.,
Neither the defendants’ answer nor any of the. evidence present a case of an accident or any question of accident. Plaintiff had to establish her case by the use of circumstances and the use of a reconstruction expert as to what occurred. The defendants contend that they were in no way negligent, and the collision resulted from the
In my opinion "the evidence plainly shows that the injuries of the [decedent] were due either exclusively to his own negligence, or solely to the negligence of the defendant [driver], or to the negligence of both the [decedent] and the defendant [driver].” Everett v. Clegg,
Under the case of Everett v. Clegg,
This was not a case of a pure casualty which exists without fault or carelessness on the part of either party. Massey v. Ga. Power Co.,
It simply cannot be said that the collision was unavoidable or inevitable. Someone was guilty of negligence.
I am authorized to state that Judge Smith and Judge Carley join in this dissent.
