Childs v. Southern Railway Co.
This text of 15 S.E.2d 825 (Childs v. Southern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Childs sued the Southern Bailway Company for the alleged negligent homicide of his wife at a railroad crossing. The petition contained 27 paragraphs, and paragraph 27 contained subparagraphs (a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (g), and (h). Said subparagraphs (f), (g) and (h) were stricken on special demurrer, and that ruling was excepted to pendente lite and assigned as error in the bill of exceptions. The case proceeded to verdict and judgment for the defendant, and that ruling was assigned as error in a direct bill of exceptions, no motion for new trial being made. The assignment of error on the ruling upon the demurrer was as follows: Plaintiff in error “alleges that the order of the court sustaining said grounds of demurrer, as set out in said exceptions pendente lite, was contrary to law, and he assigns error on said ruling . . as being contrary to law.” The assignment of error on the final judgment reads as follows: Plaintiff in error “assigns error upon said verdict of the jury and the judgment of the court entered thereon as being contrary to law. He alleges that because of the ruling on said demurrer he was deprived of proving said allegations of negligence stricken from his pleadings, and that the verdict and judgment, rendered after said demurrer was erroneously sustained, were contrary to law.”
In Federal Land Bank v. U. S. Fidelity &c. Co., 188 Ga. 138 (2 S. E. 2d, 916), the court ruled as follows: '“In order for the court to be empowered to pass upon an assignment of error, where there has been a verdict and no motion for new trial, the antecedent ruling, under the terms of the Code, § 6-804, must have been one which necessarily controlled the verdict, judgment or decree.” See also, to the same effect, McRae v. Boykin, 50 Ga. App. 866 (179 S. E. 535), and McDaniel r. Atlanta Coca-Cola Co., 60 Ga. App. 92, 98 (2 S. E. 2d, 810). In the Federal Land Bank case, supra, the court said: “The ruling sustaining the plaintiff’s demurrer addressed to several portions of the bank’s answer did not *281 necessarily control the verdict or decree. The whole answer was not stricken. The case was not in default. The court did not by its ruling take the case away from the jury. They [the rulings] may have ‘entered into and affected the further progress of the ■case’ (and this is the language of the plaintiff in error, taken from the ease of Lyndon v. Georgia Railway & Electric Co., 129 Ga. 353, 58 S. E. 1047); but antecedent rulings must have been such as did necessarily control the verdict and decree. The ruling in the Lyndon ease did not deal with the question whether the antecedent ruling was controlling, but only with the sufficiency of the assignment of error on the final judgment. In order to come within the provision of the Code, § 6-804, the rulings on the demurrer must not only have in some degree entered into and affected the further progress of the case, but must have been such rulings as necessarily ■controlled the verdict and final decree.” It will be observed that the Supreme Court in that case clearly distinguished the ruling ■there made from the ruling in the Lyndon case, and the same distinguishment applies to the instant ease, where the assignment of ■error on the final judgment is sufficient, but where the assignment ■of error on the antecedent ruling on the special demurrer was insufficient in that it did not allege, nor did the record show, that the sustaining of the demurrer necessarily controlled the verdict •■and the final judgment. As said by the Supreme Court in the .Federal Land Bank case, supra: “It makes no practical difference whether, under this record, the proper judgment to be rendered is ■one of affirmance or dismissal. The result is the same.”
Judgment affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
15 S.E.2d 825, 65 Ga. App. 279, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childs-v-southern-railway-co-gactapp-1941.