Appellant-plaintiffs brought suit, seeking to recover for injuries allegedly resulting from a vehicular collision. The case was tried before a jury, and a verdict was returned in favor of appellee-defendants. Appellants appeal from the judgment entered by the trial court on the jury’s verdict and enumerate as error only the trial court’s giving of a charge on the principle of legal accident.
1. Appellants urge that the giving of a charge on legal accident should no longer be sanctioned.
Although it has been recognized that a charge on legal accident is potentially confusing and misleading to juries and is redundant of the general principles of negligence law, “Georgia has not discarded accident as a proper subject for jury instructions. . . . [Cit.]”
Chadwick v. Miller,
2. Appellant also urges that a charge on legal accident was not authorized by the evidence. “A review of the record shows that there was . . . evidence which would have authorized the jury to find that, notwithstanding appellee[-driver]’s exercise of ordinary reasonable care, he lost control of his [vehicle] on the rain-slick highway [at a point where water was pouring across the road due to insufficient drainage], hydroplaned into the lane of on-coming traffic and struck the vehicle that was being operated by appellant[-driver]. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in giving a charge on the defense of legal accident. [Cit.]”
Whitehead v. Coffey,
Judgment affirmed.
