Goldstein v. Karr

140 S.E.2d 40, 110 Ga. App. 806, 1964 Ga. App. LEXIS 766
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedDecember 3, 1964
Docket40743
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 140 S.E.2d 40 (Goldstein v. Karr) 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.

Bluebook
Goldstein v. Karr, 140 S.E.2d 40, 110 Ga. App. 806, 1964 Ga. App. LEXIS 766 (Ga. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

Bell, Presiding Judge.

Special ground 4 of plaintiff’s motion for new trial assigns error upon an excerpt from the court’s charge to the jury. The objections are based in varying *808 phraseology on the ground that the excerpt eliminated the comparative negligence rule from the jury’s consideration. It is, however, unnecessary for us to rule upon these contentions as the following appears in the trial court’s certificate of approval of the charge: “At the conclusion of the charge, and immediately after the jury had retired, counsel for defendant and counsel for plaintiff approached the bench and counsel for defendant raised the question whether or not the court had sufficiently charged the jury on the issue of comparative negligence. The court offered to recall the jury and give the jury a charge on comparative negligence unless both counsel would waive the further charge on comparative negligence. Both counsel, having expressly waived said charge on comparative negligence, the court did not recall the jury.”

The court had charged on comparative negligence to a degree. We cannot say as a matter of law that the additional charge on the principle contemplated by the court and waived by counsel would not have eliminated the subject matter of the plaintiff’s complaints. The express waiver made at the trial by the parties is binding on them and neither can urge as error in a motion for new trial substance which the waiver embraced. Greenway v. Sloan, 211 Ga. 775, 776 (2) (88 SE2d 366).

Ground 5 complains of the following excerpt from the court’s charge to the jury: “One who is rightfully using the highway or street has a right to the use thereof which is superior to that of one who is violating traffic regulations, and in the absence of knowledge, she is not required to anticipate that some other user will unexpectedly violate the law or rule of the road and create a situation of danger.”

This special ground of the motion obviously relies on the ruling of this court in the case of Bennett v. George, 105 Ga. App. 527, 529 (6) (125 SE2d 122). Indeed the wording of the ground itself skillfully tracks the language used by Judge Hall in the Bennett case. However, the ground does not show evidence of a stature comparable to that with which Judge Hall dealt. On the contrary, the evidence to which this ground points does not show circumstances sufficient to create a jury question of the kind considered in Bennett. Here, the “circumstances” shown by the *809 ground were not enough to give warning to the defendant and place upon her a duty to anticipate negligence by another driver. In this status the excerpt from the trial judge’s charge was not incomplete and he was not required to take the second step as in Bennett and explain “that whether circumstances were such as to warn a driver that another might fail to obey the law, or such that a driver in the exercise of ordinary care could assume that another will obey the law, was a question for the jury.”

Another contention presented in special ground 5 is that the court by the use of the pronoun “she” expressed an opinion as to who was and who was not at fault. Plaintiff is a man and defendant is a woman.

There is no merit in this contention.

There is uncontradicted evidence in the record that the plaintiff was indeed in violation of a city ordinance by passing to the right of another vehicle which at the time was stopped at the intersection. In this status of the evidence, even if the statement constituted an opinion of the court (which we do not decide), it was not erroneous. When a fact is proved by undisputed evidence, it is never error for a trial judge to assume or intimate that the fact is proved. Fitzgerald Cotton Oil Co. v. Farmers Supply Co., 3 Ga. App. 212, 216-217 (3) (59 SE 713); and see Code § 81-1104 and numerous annotations, catchwords “Undisputed facts.”

With respect to the court’s use of masculine pronouns in preceding and following portions of the charge, each of these was used merely in the generic sense and did not amount to an expression of opinion. See Code Ann. § 102-102 (3); Hightower v. State, 14 Ga. App. 246, 250 (3) (80 SE 684); Wright v. State, 206 Ga. 644 (58 SE2d 181).

The trial judge elsewhere in the charge submitted to the jury the issue whether defendant was driving in violation of certain traffic regulations, and the judge expressly cautioned the jury on more than one occasion that they should not take anything he said as an expression of opinion on the facts as all evidentiary matters were addressed entirely and exclusively to the jury: Under the circumstances in this case the charge is not subject to the objection that the court expressed opinions -as to who was *810 and was. not at fault. “Where it is contended in a special ground of the motion for new trial that an excerpt from the charge of the court is error as containing an expression of opinion on what has been proved, the excerpt will be considered in its context and with the charge as a whole, including a statement of the court that nothing he has said should be construed as an expression of opinion on his part.” Imperial Investment Co. v. Modernization Construction Co., 96 Ga. App. 385 (1) (100 SE2d 107).

Special ground 6 complains that the trial judge erred in charging the jury that Code Ann. § 68-1636 and § 30.41 of the Code of the City of Atlanta are substantially similar. A comparison of these two statutory provisions does in fact reveal them to be identical, with the single exception that the city ordinance goes one step further than the State statute by including an additional requirement as a condition for the permissible overtaking and passing on the right side of one vehicle by another. This additional requirement is that “visible traffic lines are marked on the pavement.” Obviously, the charge could not have been harmful to the plaintiff, for by interpreting the instruction as excluding the additional requirement of the ordinance, is to show a benefit to the plaintiff of one less standard of conduct to meet. Interpreting the instruction to include the additional requirement of the ordinance is neither to harm nor to benefit the plaintiff but is to apply to his conduct the standard required.

Special ground 8 objects also to the trial court’s description of Code Ann. § 68-1651 and § 30.48 of the city code as being “substantially similar.” A comparison in juxtaposition of these provisions reveals that they are indeed precisely as the judge described them. The burden imposed by the portion of the city code in evidence is merely repetitious of the burden imposed by the State statute.

The trial judge did not err in overruling special grounds 6 and 8 of the motion for new trial.

Ground 7 of the plaintiff’s motion for new trial complains that the trial judge erred in charging, in effect, that “§ 30.41 of the City Code of Atlanta reads substantially” the same as Code Ann. § 68-1651. This charge was erroneous because Code Ann. *811

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Bluebook (online)
140 S.E.2d 40, 110 Ga. App. 806, 1964 Ga. App. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldstein-v-karr-gactapp-1964.