22 Ga. App. 313 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1918
We do not deem it necessary to consider in detail -all the questions passed upon in tAe beadnotes above, or to refer specifically to-the grounds of the motion for a new trial which are covered by the 'general holding in the last headnote. Two of the grounds of the motion, for a new trial which are not specifically referred to in the headnotes may perhaps require some slight reference. The 4th ground of the motion for a new trial assigns error upon the following charge: "If the defendant company and its employees were negligent, and the plaintiff, J. F.. Jarrett, or his wife, Mrs. J. F. Jarrett, were negligent, the plaintiffs might nevertheless recover if the negligence of the plaintiff, J. F. Jarrett, or the negligence of his wife did not amount to a failure to exercise ordinary care, and if they could not by the exercise of ordinary care have avoided the homicide.” It is insisted (a) that this charge authorized the jury to, find a verdict against the defendant for any negligence of the defendant of its employees, without restricting the same to the apts of negligence complained of in the plaintiff’s petition. The reply to this objection may be found in the explicit'
The 5th ground of the motion for a new trial complains of the following excerpt from the charge of the court: “When the injury is shown, or the homicide is shown as I have stated,’ tvhich is admitted by the defendant company in this case, to have taken place in the operation of its train, of cars, the presumption arises that the railway company was negligent in each' of the particulars alleged in the declaration, and the burden would be upon the railway company to show that its employees exercised ordinary and reason
The grounds of the motion for a new trial covered by the 3d headnote are the only grounds that we think it necessary to discuss. That headnote covers the exceptions taken in the 6th, 7th, and 8th grounds.. To state briefly'the-points raised thereby, it is insisted that the court erred in failing to give, in any portion of the charge, instructions as to the diminution of damages in proportion to the amount of default attributable to the plaintiff J. F. Jarrett or to his deceased wife, in the event they should find from the evidence' that the agents and employees of the defendant were guilty of negligence amounting to a lack of ordinary and reasonable care and diligence in causing the homicide complained of, and that there was also some degree of negligence, though not amounting to a lack of ordinary care, on the part of said Jarrett and his said wife, or either of them, in causing or contributing to the homicide complained of, or in failing to prevent or avoid the same.
It is clear to us that a plea setting up as a complete bar to any recovery lyhatsoever an alleged want of ordinary care on the part of the deceased and of her husband was an entirely distinct and separate defense from the defense of comparative negligence, authorizing the jury to diminish the recovery where the negligence of the plaintiff or of the deceased did .not amount to an entire lack of ordinary care, and that the former plea would not include the latter. In the case of Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Smith, supra, it was said: “Where contributory negligence of the plaintiff is not pleaded either as a complete defense or in mitigation of damages, it is not ground for new trial, in the absence of a written request, that the court omitted from his instructions the principle that if plaintiff and defendant are both at fault, the former may recover, but that his damages will be diminished in proportion to the amount of default attributable to him.” This would seem to intimate that where the contributory negligence of the plaintiff is pleaded only as a'complete defense, the court should instruct the jury, without any request, that where the plaintiff and the defendant are both at fault, the former may recover, but his dam
In Savannah Electric Co. v. Crawford, 130 Ga. 421 (60 S. E. 1056), the issue was presented whether the court erred in failing ’to charge the law in regard to the apportionment of damages if the plaintiff was at fault, but the fault of the plaintiff was not such as to bar a recovery, and Mr. Justice Lumpkin said, in delivering the opinion of the court: “It has been held several times, in suits of this character, that where the law upon the question of negli
In the recent case of Central of Georgia Ry. Co. v. Hill, 31 Ga. App. 231 (94 S. E. 50), it was held that there was-no reversible error in the failure of the court to give in charge to tire jury the law of contributory negligence (comparative negligence) and apportionment of damages where the question was not raised by the pleadings, and there was no written request so to charge; and it was further said that “it is not reversible error'for the court to fail to give in charge to the jury the law of contributory negligence, and apportionment of damages, where it is not, under the contentions of the parties [italics ours], directly involved in tlie case, and when there is no request to charge upon that subject.” By reference to the original record in the case last, referred to, it will be found that it was distinctly pleaded by the defendant in that case that if the defendant was injured “it was on account of his own negligence, and the defendant company'owed him no duty at said time and place, and by the exercise of ordinary care he could have avoided any injury to himself.” It will likewise appear from an examination of the record in that case that there was no effort to specifically plead comparative negligence, or to set up the right of' the defendant to have the damages assessed against it diminished on account of negligence of the plaintiff not amounting to a want of ordinary care. The ruling, therefore,, of this court in the Sill ease, supra, is an exact adjudication of the precise question involved in this ease. The record in the case sub judicé discloses that the defendant, 'in detail, explicitly, definitely, and repeatedly pleaded a want of ordinary care on the part of the deceased and of her husband (one of the plaintiffs), as a complete defense and entire bar to any recovery whatsoever against it. However, in the plea of the defendant it is nowhere suggested or intimated that either the plaintiff J. E.' Jarrett or the deceased or both were chargeable with such negligence not amounting to a want of ordinary care, and not constituting an entire bar to any recovery, as would serve to diminish the amount of damages to be awarded by the jury. The ruling in the Sill case, supra, therefore is directly applicable.. It is evident from the record that the -trial judge-in
In Western & Atlantic R. Co. v. Smith, 145 Ga. 276, 281 (88 S. E. 983), Mr. Justice Lumpkin, in delivering the opinion of the Supreme Court on this subject, expressed his individual opinion to the effect that in an action to recover damages for a personal injury two questions were necessarily involved: first, whether plaintiff is entitled to recover at all; and second, if so, what is the proper measure of damages; and that both of these questions were directly involved, and in order properly to instruct the jury as to the measure of damages, if the evidence so authorized, the rule for diminishing such damages should be given. He suggested very fitly that “it. might also be urged if the defendant denies liability altogether, that for it to plead negligence of the plaintiff to diminish damages would have the effect of causing the jury to believe that it substantially admitted that some damages should be recovered.” He concluded this expression of his personal opinion, however, with the observation that the contrary rule is established by a number of decisions, and with the ruling by the court that “in the present case it would have been better to have given in charge the rule of comparative negligence and its effect in reducing damages. But it can not be held that a reversal will result from a failure to do so, in the absence of any request for such an instruction.” While in the average suit of this character it would be apparently bad policy on the part of the defendant to file a' plea setting up a claim for a diminution of damages, where it is insisted that no recovery whatever is authorized against the defendant, for the reasons suggested by Mr. Justice Lumpkin, referred to above, a defendant can nevertheless obtain, by a timely written request for a charge on this subject, all the benefit that'might be gained by precisely and explicitly pleading this defense, and this without the attendant disadvantages. The defendant in this case neither interposed a plea setting up this special defense, nor made a timely written request for a charge on this’ subject, and consequently can not obtain a reversal on account of a failure of the trial judge to
Judgment affirmed.