Powell v. Blackstock

13 S.E.2d 503, 64 Ga. App. 442, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 90
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 12, 1941
Docket28709.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 13 S.E.2d 503 (Powell v. Blackstock) 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
Powell v. Blackstock, 13 S.E.2d 503, 64 Ga. App. 442, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 90 (Ga. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Gardner, J.

In a tort action the failure of the pleader, when praying that process issue and that the defendant be and appear to answer the petitioner’s complaint, to pray, verbatim et literatum, that "judgment be given” in a stipulated sum or sums, will not for that reason defeat the cause of action or render the court impotent to give judgment in the event of recovery. For .authority inferentially for this rule, see Pitts & Son Co. v. Bank of Shiloh, 20 Ga. App. 143 (2) (92 S. E. 775). Where the verdict may be returned in a single sum, though it be the aggregate of several items specified, judgment would follow. But there are causes of action in which relief or recovery sought may be several .and divergent, when specification in the prayer would become necessary, or else the action would fail. Riordan v. Baldwin, 150 Ga. 540 (104 S. E. 204).

The allegations that the timber which was negligently damaged at the hands of the defendants by burning, in the sum of $300, and that fence also burned was damaged in the sum of :$100, or a total of $400, were not subject to demurrer as a conelusion of the pleader. The plaintiff was pleading an ultimate, material fact as to the extent of damage. This was sufficient. Lefkoff v. Sicro, 189 Ga. 554 (10) (6 S. E. 2d, 687). Facts as to the value of the land, or the timber, or both, before the burning, as compared to the resultant values obtaining after the burning, are evidentiary and need not be pleaded. Lefkoff v. Sicro, supra; Price v. Cobb, 63 Ga. App. 694 (11 S. E. 2d, 822).

Headnote 3 needs no elaboration.

Except where motive is the foundation of a cause of action, motive for bringing the action is immaterial. In the instant ease *444 the cause of action is predicated on the right to recover for the tortious injury to the plaintiff’s property. If the cause of action is supported in law and fact, extraneous of the motive for bringing the action, the motive of the plaintiff for denying or availing himself of the remedy to redress the wrong is not material. The court did not err in sustaining the objection to certain evidence offered by the defendants, that the plaintiff had told the witness “that the only reason he filed this suit was because the railroad, had treated him wrong about a hog.”

The court charged the jury: “If . . you should encounter irreconcilable conflicts, then it becomes a matter for you: to determine for yourselves which evidence you will accept as the-truth and which you will reject under such circumstances; and where you find irreconcilable conflicts the law brings to your aid,, in order to ascertain the truth, certain rules that you may bear in mind, and you may also bear those rules in mind to determine where the preponderance of evidence lies.” The court gave in charge the rules in question. The effect of the fourth assignment' of error in the motion is that the court erred in charging the-jury that, when the jury encounters irreconcilable conflicts, it becomes a matter for the jury to determine for themselves which evidence they will accept as the truth and which they will reject.. This assignment is without merit. The rule is that while relevant testimony by witnesses who are not impeached can not arbitrarily be disregarded by a court or a jury upon the assumption that it. was, not, in point of fact, in accord with the truth (Seaboard Air-Line Railway v. Walthour, 117 Ga. 427, 43 S. E. 720), and while facts testified to by disinterested witnesses who are in no way discredited, within their knowledge and not improbable, and not in conflict with other evidence, are to be taken as legally established (Campbell v. State, 157 Ga. 233, 235, 121 S. E. 306), yet where-there are conflicts in the evidence and the testimony of witnesses is-contradicted (Georgia Southern & Florida Railway Co. v. Thompson, 111 Ga. 731, 36 S. E. 945; Georgia & Alabama Railway Co. v. Cook, 114 Ga. 760, 762, 40 S. E. 718), such evidence need not betaken as legally established; and, if the conflicts can not be reconciled, it is for the jury to determine for themselves which evidence-they will accept as the truth and which they will reject.

When the court charged the jury, as to the term “ordinary *445 care,” that the “law does not lay down any given rule whereby you can determine what ordinary care is, except that [it] is a relative term, and it is that care which an ordinarily prudent person would exercise under the same or similar circumstances,” and1 that “before the railroad company could be held responsible for damages alleged to have resulted from the alleged fire . . von must believe that it was . . set out” by the agents of the company, and that “the railroad company through its agents and employees did not exercise ordinary care to protect the property of others in setting out that fire,” the court did not err in failing, in the absence of a timely written request, to enlarge on the definition, or in failing to charge the definition of ordinary care as applied to the preservation of property. While the Code, § 105-201, provides that ordinary care or diligence as applied to the preservation of property “means that care which every prudent man takes of his own property of a similar nature,” such provision under the pleadings and facts in the instant case are inapplicable. The duty resting upon the defendants was that they should so act as not negligently to injure the property: there was no original duty upon the defendants to preserve the property, as, for example, would have existed had they been bailees of the property. The criticism of the charge, that the court did not state correctly the measure of damages, that “for fencing injured or destroyed the recovery should be measured by the cost of restoring it and making its condition as good as that in which it was when injured' or destroyed” (Central Railroad & Banking Co. v. Murray, 93 Ga. 257 (4), 20 S. E. 129), is meritorious, but does not require a reversal. That rule must be considered in the more inclusive rule set out in Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. v. Kohlruss, 124 Ga. 250 (52 S. E. 166) : “The measure of damages for the negligent firing and destruction of the fencing and ornamental trees on the-plaintiff’s land by the railroad company in the operation of its train was the diminution in value of the premises resulting from' the injury caused by such firing.” We think this rule was sufficiently presented in the charge as a whole, and that there was some evidence as to the value of posts for restoring the fence, and as to labor in that connection, which would render harmless, in this case, the omission to charge the rule fully.

The evidence authorized a finding that the land along which *446

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.E.2d 503, 64 Ga. App. 442, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-blackstock-gactapp-1941.