28 S.E.2d 885 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1944
1. The evidence for the plaintiff failed to support the allegation of the petition that the driver of the automobile by which it was alleged the plaintiff was injured, was at the time of the accident the agent and employee of the defendants and upon the business of the defendants, and therefore the court did not err in granting the motion for nonsuit.
2. It is no ground to reverse a judgment of nonsuit that the court excluded evidence which was merely cumulative in its nature, and which, if admitted, would not have changed the scope and effect of the evidence in the case.
The defendants answered and denied the allegations of the petition, *564 and alleged that if A. S. Moore was driving an automobile owned by them at the time of the alleged accident, he was not operating it on the business of the defendants, or either of them, but was on a purely personal mission.
On the trial, the plaintiff testified that she was injured when the automobile she was driving was struck by an automobile owned by the defendants and operated by A. S. Moore. She described the nature and extent of her injuries, which she testified were the result of the negligence of Moore in the operation of the automobile he was driving at the time.
A. O. Mitchell, one of the defendants, testified to the effect that he and his wife, who was the other defendant, owned Mitchell Motors, an automobile agency; that A. S. Moore was employed by them as a salesman prior to the time of the accident; that he was employed on a commission basis, and privileged to find purchasers with priority to purchase automobiles; that he was allowed the use of their automobiles as an accommodation and a courtesy; that R. G. Jones was the sales manager of the business and in charge of sales, but that he was not directly responsible for the opening and the locking of the doors to the building, as this was handled by the service department; that Jones had a key to the building, and the right to unlock the doors of the building to show any prospective purchaser an automobile, and the right to tell any salesman to lock it up for him; that Moore also had a key to the building and the right to unlock the doors to show any prospective purchaser the automobiles, and this was the primary reason that he had a key to the building.
A. S. Moore testified to the effect that on the day of the accident R. G. Jones and he were the only salesmen employed by the defendants, and that one of them was supposed to lock the doors of the building each afternoon. They alternated days, and he would lock up one afternoon and Jones the next. The defendants furnished Jones and him an automobile to use, and at the time of the accident, he was driving one of the automobiles owned by the defendants. The defendants owned eight or ten automobiles which were used for demonstration purposes, and he was allowed to use any one of them that he desired to use. The defendants furnished the gasoline and oil used by him in his work. He was employed to sell as many automobiles as he could for the defendants, and when not *565 demonstrating an automobile to a prospective purchaser, he would keep and use the automobile for his own purposes. On the day of the accident, he demonstrated the automobile to a prospective purchaser that morning, but left him at the post-office building and then drove by where his wife worked and picked her up, and they drove by a grocery store and purchased groceries before going home, where his wife prepared lunch for them. About four o'clock that afternoon, he drove back to the building of the defendants to lock the doors. He saw that the rear door was locked, and locked the front door, and after crossing the street where he purchased some cigars, he returned to the automobile and started home. He had no prospective purchasers to see that afternoon, or the next day, and he had finished everything he was supposed to do at the defendants' place of business before starting home. He could have driven down town in the automobile if he had had any business there, or could have gone to a picture show. He was responsible for the automobile, and when he had it in his possession had full control of it for any purpose.
After the introduction of the evidence, the court, on motion, granted a nonsuit, and the exception here is to that judgment.
A motion to nonsuit is in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, and should never be granted where there is any evidence to support the plaintiff's action, or where the jury can fairly infer from the evidence a state of facts favorable to the plaintiff. Hawkins v. National Surety Corp.,
The plaintiff contended that the court erred in excluding testimony of the witness, A. S. Moore, to the effect that on the day of the accident he had an understanding with R. G. Jones, who was the general sales manager, that he would lock up the premises that afternoon; that he promised R. G. Jones that he would return that afternoon and see that everything was locked up; that he was a *567
salesman and the sales force was responsible for seeing that the place was locked up; that the last one out at night would see that the place was locked and all the cars were inside; and that when he went to work for the defendants, they agreed to furnish him with transportation and gasoline and oil for use in doing his work. The plaintiff contends that the testimony was pertinent on the question of agency to show that the witness was under a duty to return to the building that afternoon because of a direct order to do so by a superior officer, and contends that the ruling was erroneous and controlled the judgment of nonsuit granted by the court. The evidence which it is complained was excluded would not have saved the case from nonsuit. It was merely cumulative to evidence which was admitted, and it would not have materially changed the scope and effect of the evidence in the case. "It is no ground to reverse a judgment of nonsuit that the court excluded evidence which, even if admissible, would not have materially changed the scope and effect of the evidence which was admitted." Stewart v. Savannah Electric Co.,
Judgment affirmed. Felton, and Parker, JJ., concur.