Hester v. Baker

349 S.E.2d 834, 180 Ga. App. 627, 1986 Ga. App. LEXIS 2211
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 21, 1986
Docket73110
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 349 S.E.2d 834 (Hester v. Baker) 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
Hester v. Baker, 349 S.E.2d 834, 180 Ga. App. 627, 1986 Ga. App. LEXIS 2211 (Ga. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Birdsong, Presiding Judge.

This is a civil action for damages arising out of an automobile accident which occurred on November 4, 1983, in Bibb County, Georgia. Plaintiff, Audrey Hester, appeals from a jury verdict for the defendant, Curtis Baker. On the evening of November 4, 1983, Hester and Baker had a date and went to dinner at a restaurant in Macon. Baker said he had a couple of beers and Hester had a couple of alcoholic drinks. Following dinner they went to Hester’s grandmother’s house where Hester was living. Ms. Hester said she received a telephone call from a man who wanted to date her, and Baker jerked the phone out of her hand and placed it on the cradle. When the man called back, Baker is said to have told him if he ever called Hester again he would kill him. Ms. Hester said their argument may have been disturbing her grandmother so she asked Baker if they could go to his mother’s house. Baker refused and Hester said she left in her own car, believing Baker would follow.

She testified that after she left her driveway Baker pulled up beside her for a few seconds and then dropped back behind her car. She increased her speed but he pulled up alongside her car for a second time for a few seconds and again dropped back to the rear of her car. She increased her speed to “anywhere between forty and fifty” but Baker again pulled up beside her car, very close: “I felt an impact. I felt something hit me. ... I went off the side of the road. I lost control of my car” and it overturned. She received numerous injuries. When she arrived at the hospital, the doctor and the investigating officer noted needle marks in her arms. According to a police officer, the attending doctor asked Ms. Hester if she had used any drugs, “[a]nd she said: ‘Not tonight,’ although she had taken speed and crystal meth frequently in the past.”

*628 Baker testified that after he and Hester returned to her grandmother’s that evening she wanted to purchase some “crystal meth” and he attempted to dissuade her. She took the phone into her bedroom and returned a few minutes thereafter saying she had made arrangements “to do it.” He said he wanted no part of it and started to leave. Hester left at the same time and started to drive toward Macon. He does not remember whether he pulled up beside her when she left her driveway, but he did follow her for a short period of time and attempted to pass her on a slight rise. He saw the reflection of headlights of an oncoming car and pulled in behind Hester’s car. “[S]hortly thereafter, she veered to the left [of] the centerline, then to the shoulder, then over to the centerline, then back to the shoulder” and off the road into the ditch where her car overturned. Baker denies his car touched Hester’s car or that he attempted to run her off the road.

The incident was investigated by two police officers. Both officers had received specialized training in automobile accident investigation. Ms. Hester gave them a statement in the hospital emergency room as to how the accident occurred. She told them she and her boyfriend had an argument at her house and she had left and he was following her in his car “and that as she was trying to leave him, she was watching in her rearview mirror, looking for him, and that in doing so that she had ran [sic] off the road, that she had run off the road.” Four days after the accident, Ms. Hester called the officer and told him the accident did not occur as previously stated but her boyfriend “was chasing her and that he had attempted to pass her two times, and on the third time his car stuck hers, which caused her to wreck. . . .” She told them that each time Baker’s car pulled up alongside her vehicle, his car “hovered beside her vehicle for approximately thirty seconds. . . .” The officers checked both cars. In examining her car the officer said “[t]he only damage that I could see was damage from the accident itself. By that I mean that I could not find any other damage that would indicate that another vehicle was involved.” The only damage found on Baker’s car “was a small dent on the right front fender that appeared to be very old, and this was because it had already rusted over, it was rusty.” The officers were of the opinion that the accident was “the type where the driver simply was going in a forward direction and the car gradually left the roadway, it did not appear to have been an abrupt swerving type motion.” The officers “could find no evidence of any impact between the two vehicles” and concluded it was “a one vehicle accident where contact was not made between two vehicles.” Plaintiff brings this appeal from judgment entered on a jury verdict for the defendant. Held:

1. Plaintiff has failed to follow our codal requirements that enumerations “shall set out separately each error relied upon.” OCGA *629 § 5-6-40; MacDonald v. MacDonald, 156 Ga. App. 565, 566 (275 SE2d 142). Two of plaintiff’s enumerations each contain two allegations of error which must be treated separately.

2. Plaintiff contends it was error for the trial court to charge on “comparative negligence.” The common law doctrine of “contributory negligence” which bars recovery by a plaintiff is not followed in Georgia. Ware v. Alston, 112 Ga. App. 627, 633 (145 SE2d 721). The prevailing doctrine in this state is the comparative negligence rule, which holds “where there is negligence by both parties which is concurrent and contributes to the injury sued for, a recovery by the plaintiff is not barred, but his damages shall be diminished by an amount proportioned to the amount of fault attributable to him, provided that his fault is less than the defendant’s and that by the exercise of ordinary care he could have avoided the consequences of the defendant’s negligence after it became apparent or in the exercise of ordinary care should have been discovered by the plaintiff.” Georgia Power Co. v. Maxwell, 52 Ga. App. 430, 431 (183 SE 654).

One of the defenses pled by defendant was comparative negligence, in that he alleged that even if he was negligent, plaintiff was negligent to an equal or greater degree. The evidence showed that plaintiff told the police she and her boyfriend had been arguing and “she had left and he was after her in another vehicle and that as she was trying to leave him, she was watching in her rearview mirror, looking for him, and that in doing so . . . she had run off the road.” Baker testified that he was behind Hester when he saw her car swerve over the centerline twice, then leave the road, enter the ditch and overturn. This is evidence that plaintiff was keeping an improper lookout and failed to maintain control of her car, which could have contributed to the cause of the accident.

Hester said that Baker drove his car alongside of hers and “hovered” there, and each time drove his car closer and closer to her car, until finally she felt his car strike her car, she lost control, left the roadway and her car overturned. Baker admitted that he had attempted to pass Hester’s car, just prior to the accident, and had fallen back to the immediate rear of her car when the incident occurred. Under this evidence, the jury was authorized to find that either or both of the parties were negligent, and that each party’s negligence could have contributed to the incident, and that the negligence of either party could have been the proximate cause of the incident. Hence, it was not error for the trial court to charge on the issue of comparative negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
349 S.E.2d 834, 180 Ga. App. 627, 1986 Ga. App. LEXIS 2211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hester-v-baker-gactapp-1986.