A plea of guilty to a charge of violating a criminal statute is admissible against the offender in a civil negligence action against him where the negligence relied on grew out of the violation of the statute.
Roper
v.
Scott, 77 Ga. App.
120 (2) (
It is clear that the plea of guilty was admitted in evidence only for its impeaching value. The plea not having been admitted as a court paper, the rule of evidence pertaining to court and official papers (Code § 38-601) does not apply; and since the plea was not so admitted, it, under the facts of this case, assumed the status of a private writing and the rule of evidence applicable to private writings applies (Code § 38-701), and the “highest and best evidence” objection was good and should have been sustained.
The plaintiff in error complains that the court erred in charging as follows: “The jury may, in its discretion, allow the plaintiff to recover the reasonable value of the use of the vehicle for a reasonable and necessary length of time during which the vehicle was being repaired, provided the aggregate of these amounts does not exceed the value of the vehicle before the injury with interest thereon.” The only valid exception to this charge is that there was no evidence to authorize the charge because it nowhere appeared in the evidence that the length of time'the vehicle was being repaired was a reasonable length of time. The charge correctly stated an abstract principle of law, but it was not adjusted to the evidence in this case. The plaintiff testified that 41 days elapsed from the time of the wreck until he “went back on the road.” He further testified that he checked two or three times a week while the vehicle was in repair to see when the repairs would be finished. But there was no evidence to show that the 41 days was a reasonable length of time under the circumstances of the case. In the absence of such a showing on the part of the plaintiff, the charge complained of was error. See
Lamb
v.
Landers,
67
Ga. App.
588, 593 (21
*440
S. E. 2d 321); Blashfield’s Cyclopedia of Automobile Law and Practice, Vol. 6, Part 1, § 3418, p. 63; Kohl
v.
Arp,
It is not necessary to rule on the other grounds of the amended motion.
The court erred in denying the amended motion for new trial.
Judgment reversed. Quillian and Nichols, JJ., concur.
