Sanders Truck Transportation Co. v. Beverly

147 S.E.2d 855, 113 Ga. App. 271, 1966 Ga. App. LEXIS 1035
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 18, 1966
Docket41668
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 147 S.E.2d 855 (Sanders Truck Transportation Co. v. Beverly) 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
Sanders Truck Transportation Co. v. Beverly, 147 S.E.2d 855, 113 Ga. App. 271, 1966 Ga. App. LEXIS 1035 (Ga. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

Frankum, Judge.

1. The original petition alleged in paragraph 5 that John L. Sammons was driving a 1960 International truck and was towing a second 1960 International truck and trailer occupied by Joseph Jeffers. In paragraph 13, with respect to the negligence charged against the defendant Joseph Jeffers, it was alleged that he was negligent “in towing a disabled tractor-trailer unit upon the Sand Bar Feriy bridge at night” and “in towing a disabled tractor-trailer unit upon the Sand Bar Ferry bridge and stopping same” without lights. (Emphasis supplied). The defendant demurred to the original petition (subject to its various dilatory pleas and motions) on the ground that these allegations constituted a pleading of the facts in the alternative and so disjunctively that it could not be determined upon which facts the plaintiff relied. The plaintiff amended the petition by striking the quoted allegations of negligence with respect to the defendant Jeffers and by substituting therefor allegations of negligence with respect to his acts in operating a disabled tractor-trailer unit “while being towed upon the Sand Bar Ferry bridge” (emphasis supplied), and the stopping of the same on the bridge without lights.

[273]*273In paragraph 5 of the original petition the plaintiff alleged that both vehicles were owned by the defendant Sanders Truck Transportation Co., Inc., and were being operated for its benefit and in connection with its business by the two individual defendants, and in paragraph 16, the plaintiff sought to charge the defendant transportation company with responsibility for the negligent acts of the individual defendants under the provisions of “Georgia Code Ann. § 68-301” (Ga. L. 1955, p. 454), which by its terms made the owner of a vehicle operated upon the public highways, etc., liable for injuries to persons resulting from negligence in the operation thereof if such motor vehicle was being operated for the benefit of the owner. The defendant demurred to these allegations on the ground that the petition sought to charge the defendant transportation company with liability for the acts of the individual defendants in the alternative, in that in one place it alleged facts appropriate to charge the defendant Sanders Truck Transportation Co., Inc., with liability under the doctrine of respondeat superior, while in another place it charged that defendant with liability under the terms of Code Ann. § 68-301, and that since said Code section had been held to be unconstitutional in the case of Frankel v. Cone, 214 Ga. 733 (2) (107 SE2d 819), the petition, construed most strongly against the plaintiff, failed to' allege a cause of action with respect to the defendant transportation company. In her amendment the plaintiff struck the original paragraph 16 and substituted therefor allegations that the individual defendants were the agents and employees of the defendant transportation company and were acting within the scope of their employment and duties, and that the transportation company was chargeable with their negligent acts. The defendant transportation company objected to the allowance of the amendment on the ground that the original petition did not contain enough to amend by, and because the amendment added a new and distinct cause of action.

The first error enumerated by the appellant is that the court erred in allowing the amendment to the plaintiff’s petition over the objection of the defendant transportation company and in [274]*274thereafter denying and dismissing that defendant’s motion to strike and dismiss the plaintiff’s petition. The petition was not so devoid of substance as to be incapable of amendment. Code § 81-1302 provides: “A petition showing a plaintiff and a defendant, and setting out sufficient to indicate and specify some particular fact or transaction as a cause of action, shall be enough to amend by. The jurisdiction of the court may be shown and the details and circumstances of the particular transaction may be amplified and varied by amendment. If the declaration shall omit to allege facts essential to raise the duty or obligation involved in the cause of action which was evidently originally intended to be declared upon, the omitted fact may be supplied by amendment.” As stated in the leading case of Ellison v. Georgia R. Co., 87 Ga. 691, 707 (13 SE 809), “In every suit there must be three classes of substance: parties, subject-matter and jurisdiction.” By the provisions of Code § 81-1302, just quoted, jurisdiction, if not originally shown, may be added by amendment, but if the petition shows parties and some fact or transaction indicating the design of the pleader to allege a cause of action either ex contractu or ex delicto, it is in substance sufficient to permit amendment so long as the cause of action alleged is not changed and no new parties are added thereby. The parties defendant here, as originally alleged, were Sanders Truck Transportation Co., Inc., and the individuals, Sammons and Jeffers. The amendment did not change these parties in any way. The cause of action alleged was for negligence on the part of the named defendants in omitting various alleged duties owed the plaintiff as a member of the public using a public highway. This was not changed by the amendment. The defendant’s officers know, or should be able to ascertain, which of its drivers was driving which truck, and while it was entitled to have this information correctly alleged, the confusion engendered by the original petition was not such as to materially hinder its defense. Certainly, these were not such matters as would vitiate the entire petition. See Cannon v. Hood Constr. Co., 91 Ga. App. 20, 24 (84 SE2d 604).

In the original petition the plaintiff did not allege that the defendants Sammons and Jeffers were the servants and employees [275]*275of the defendant transportation company and that they were operating the trucks in the scope of their employment, or that the transportation company was liable for their negligent operation of the trucks because they were being operated for its benefit, thus rendering it liable under the provisions of Code Ann. § 68-301 (Ga. L. 1955, p. 454). Conceding, but not deciding, that, on general demurrer, the petition would have been subject, when construed most strongly against the plaintiff, to the construction that these allegations were in the alternative, they were not of such a character that the defect in the petition could not be cured by amendment. The only effect sought to be created by the provisions of the 1955 Act, codified in the Ann. Code as § 68-301, was to create a presumption of an agency relationship between the owner and operator of an automobile when such automobile was shown to have been operated on the public roads for the benefit of such owner. The effect of the Supreme Court’s holding in the Frankel case, supra, was simply that the imposition of this presumption as against the owner precluded him from showing the absence of any agency relationship between him and the driver, or from showing that he was not negligent and that, as thus construed, it violated the due process clauses of the State and Federal Constitutions. The plaintiff, by her amendment to her petition, recognized the effect of the ruling in the Frankel case and merely amended the petition to allege agency as a matter of fact in one of the ways otherwise permitted by law. Conney v. Atlantic Greyhound Corp., 81 Ga. App. 324 (58 SE2d 559). In so amending her petition she violated no rule of pleading.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Knox v. Landers
285 S.E.2d 767 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 S.E.2d 855, 113 Ga. App. 271, 1966 Ga. App. LEXIS 1035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-truck-transportation-co-v-beverly-gactapp-1966.