This is the second appearance before this court of this suit for damages arising from a motor vehicle collision. Since the decision in
Whitby v. Maloy,
At trial, following a query from the jury, the trial court had added to its charge in regard to defendant Cather. The plaintiff enumerates as error this additional charge which authorized the jury to apply the principle of comparative negligence as to defendant Cather so as to award nominal damages. Held:
1. Due to his default defendant Cather is in a position of having admitted each and every material allegation of the plaintiffs complaint except as to the amount of damages suffered by plaintiff.
Peek v. Southern Guaranty Ins. Co.,
2. However, plaintiff did not plead any special damages in any definite amount against the defendants. Hence, defendant Cather’s failure to answer does not result in the admission of the existence of any amount of damages, and strict proof of same is required by law. The record before us contains only a partial transcript of the trial, that is, the trial court’s charge to the jury and subsequent recharge, objections and colloquy. From the record we are unable to determine whether the plaintiff has introduced any evidence of damages. If she has not, the charge which plaintiff enumerates as error would be harmless as the evidence would have demanded the verdict found by the jury. We have no way of determining whether a verdict in any greater amount was demanded or authorized by the evidence. The burden of showing harm, as well as error, rests upon the appellant, the plaintiff in this case. See
Layne v. Rosenfeld,
Judgment affirmed.
