National Upholstery Co. v. Padgett

143 S.E.2d 494, 111 Ga. App. 840
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 1, 1965
Docket41324, 41325
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 143 S.E.2d 494 (National Upholstery Co. v. Padgett) 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
National Upholstery Co. v. Padgett, 143 S.E.2d 494, 111 Ga. App. 840 (Ga. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

111 Ga. App. 840 (1965)
143 S.E.2d 494

NATIONAL UPHOLSTERY COMPANY
v.
PADGETT.
NATIONAL UPHOLSTERY COMPANY
v.
PERKINS.

41324, 41325.

Court of Appeals of Georgia.

Submitted May 3, 1965.
Decided June 1, 1965.
Rehearing Denied June 14, 1965.

*841 Sharpe, Sharpe & Hartley, T. Malone Sharpe, for plaintiff in error.

Barrie L. Jones, contra.

RUSSELL, Judge.

1. Where civil cases were consolidated for trial by consent of counsel it was held in Ellis v. Geer, 36 Ga. *842 App. 519 (1) (137 SE 290), over complaint of the defendants that each was entitled to six peremptory challenges that the defendants jointly were entitled to only six strikes. In felony cases under a single indictment where one defendant might be convicted and the other acquitted, and the defendants do not elect to sever, each is entitled to his full number of challenges, and the State to half as many. Butler v. State, 92 Ga. 601 (19 SE 51). While there is some diversity of authority on the permissible number of challenges where actions by two plaintiffs against a single defendant are consolidated for trial (in which connection see 136 ALR Anno., p. 417), the question arose in Keplin v. Hardware Mutual Cas. Co., 24 Wis. 2d 319 (129 NW2d 321), on exception of the plaintiffs at having to share three peremptory challenges, a like number being granted the defendant. The court held: "Although there is a distinction between two cases being consolidated into one action and being consolidated for trial, we think in the absence of adverse interest the plaintiffs in the several cases consolidated for trial may be treated as one party." The exception in this case is by the single defendant, on the consolidation by consent for trial of actions by two plaintiffs, one a guest passenger and the other the personal representative of a deceased guest passenger of an automobile which collided with its truck, the exception being grounded on the fact that each side was allowed six challenges whereas it contends it should have had six as to each of the plaintiffs. The single defendant would under no circumstances be entitled to more challenges than the total of those awarded to the separate plaintiffs, and as a matter of fact the defendant makes no showing that it exhausted the number allotted to it. Since the court's decision was, if anything, favorable to the defendant by treating the sides, rather than the parties equally, it cannot under these circumstances complain.

2. A plaintiff who has sued two defendants on a joint and several cause of action may pendente lite voluntarily dismiss his petition against one of them and give a covenant not to sue without effecting a settlement of the case as to the other defendant. Register v. Andris, 83 Ga. App. 632 (64 SE2d 196); Otis v. Wren Mobile Homes, Inc., 111 Ga. App. 649 (143 SE2d 8). The instrument, being in writing and plain and unambiguous *843 in its terms, will not by parol evidence be construed to mean something other than its plain intendment. The covenant not to sue the host driver who was dismissed as a party to this action recites that "it is entered into for the purpose of avoiding litigation and . . . the undersigned expressly reserves the right to sue any other person or persons against whom she may have any claim on account of damages arising out of the above described accident." The covenant will not be construed to have been intended as an extinguishment of the cause of action against the remaining defendant simply because the plaintiff, a minor with no legal experience, when asked on cross examination by the defendant's attorney whether it was not his intention to settle the case with his host driver, replied, "Yes, sir, I reckon." Padgett, we may feel sure, had no knowledge whatever of the legal consequences of effecting a settlement or release of the entire claim as opposed to a covenant not to sue a particular party, and to impute such an intent to him in the face of the language of the instrument would be nothing short of ambush.

3. Complaint is made that the court expressed an opinion as to the value of the life of the other plaintiff's decedent by stating the plaintiff's contentions as follows: "The petition is brought by the petitioner as the mother of the deceased child to recover of the defendant the full value of the life of such child, as provided by the laws of this state, the full value of the life of Linwood Bennett, Jr., deceased, being $500,000, which she says she is entitled to recover." He also stated: "She brings this petition for the full value of the life in the amount of $500,000," and followed this by comprehensive instructions on how the value of the life of the decedent should be determined by the jury. The verdict was for only a small fraction of this amount. The jury could not reasonably have been misled into believing that the court was instructing them that the value of the decedent's life was to be taken as stated in the petition.

4. As to special ground 4 of the amended motion for a new trial, complaining of seven isolated excerpts from the charge, no error is shown because (a) they were followed by other excerpts from the charge contended to be incorrect but on which error is not assigned, or (b) because one of the excerpts may have *844 been defective, where other excerpts contained in the same ground were not subject to the defect. These assignments of error are not good. Hunt v. Williams, 104 Ga. App. 442 (3) (122 SE2d 149); Cole v. Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co., 65 Ga. App. 204 (3), 211 (15 SE2d 543).

5. Instructions on future pain and suffering were excepted to on the ground there was no issue before the jury and no evidence "that Edwin Donald Padgett will suffer any `further' mental and physical pain or suffering." It appeared from the evidence that the injuries occurred December 11, 1962. The trial was held November 17, 1964, almost two years later. The plaintiff testified that he was in the hospital for two weeks, that he suffered head and leg injuries, that he had and continues to have headaches, that at times they pain him as much as when he was in the hospital, that his leg still sometimes swells up and "just hurts and gives out on me and I have to quit and rest." His physician testified that the cuts had healed and did not look serious to him at the time; that with a joint injury you cannot say whether it could cause permanent disability because it would be hard to say how much trouble it might cause in the future. A jury may, from testimony that a plaintiff has been injured and that at the time of trial, approximately two years later, he is still suffering from such injuries, find that he will be subject to future pain and suffering although there is no positive medical evidence as to permanency. Southern R. Co. v. Clariday, 124 Ga. 958 (53 SE 461). The charge was not error for any reason assigned.

6. "It was not necessary or proper for the trial judge in instructing the jury to repeat in immediate connection with each proposition of law charged all the qualifications and exceptions applicable to it. To require him to do so would so lengthen and complicate the charge as to render it impossible to ever charge the jury fully and completely." Williams Bros. Grocery Co. v. Blanton, 105 Ga. App. 314, 320 (124 SE2d 479).

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Bluebook (online)
143 S.E.2d 494, 111 Ga. App. 840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-upholstery-co-v-padgett-gactapp-1965.