T. J. Morris Co. v. Dykes

398 S.E.2d 403, 197 Ga. App. 392, 1990 Ga. App. LEXIS 1282
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 11, 1990
DocketA90A1419
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 398 S.E.2d 403 (T. J. Morris Co. v. Dykes) 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
T. J. Morris Co. v. Dykes, 398 S.E.2d 403, 197 Ga. App. 392, 1990 Ga. App. LEXIS 1282 (Ga. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Banke, Presiding Judge.

As the appellee, who owns and operates a grocery store, was helping to unload a shipment of food from a delivery truck belonging to *393 the appellant, which is in the wholesale food business, two boxes of frozen meat weighing approximately 70 pounds each fell from the truck, striking him on the back and neck. He brought the present action against the appellant to recover for his resulting injuries. The case has been tried twice. The first trial resulted in a defense verdict, following which the appellee-plaintiff moved for and was granted a new trial. The second trial resulted in a verdict in favor of the appellee in the amount of $130,000. The trial court denied the appellant’s subsequent motion for new trial, and the present appeal followed. Held:

1. The appellant contends that the trial judge erred in refusing to exclude certain hearsay testimony offered by the appellee and two other witnesses recounting certain statements assertedly made to them by the appellant’s driver regarding why the boxes had fallen.

The appellee was standing on the ground when the accident occurred, attempting to lift a box of frozen chicken from the bed of the truck onto a dolly. As he was doing so, a stack of approximately seven other boxes of frozen meat inside the truck began to fall over. According to the appellee, the appellant’s driver, who was standing on the bed of the truck at the time, placed his back against the boxes in an attempt to hold them in place, but the two on top were stacked above his head and consequently slid down despite his efforts. Afterwards, the two men finished unloading the truck and went inside the store, where the driver telephoned his employer to report the incident. The appellee testified that after the driver completed this call he asked him what had happened, and the driver told him that “they had placed [a] beef box in betwixt the chickens and the beef box had collapsed.” In subsequent testimony, the appellee maintained that the beef boxes were not as sturdy as the chicken boxes and that, unlike the chicken boxes, they were not always filled to the top.

The appellee produced two other witnesses who testified that the driver had made similar statements to them regarding the cause of the accident. The first was a woman who had begun working at the store approximately two months after the accident but who was no longer employed there at the time of trial. She testified that approximately a year after the incident, the appellant’s driver told her that the reason the stack of boxes had fallen was because the appellant’s employees “had put the beef box in the middle in between the chicken boxes and . . . the beef box wouldn’t hold up to the pressure of the chicken boxes.” The second such witness, who had owned another grocery store in the area at the time of the accident, testified that the appellant’s driver similarly told him that “one of the boxes . . . toward the bottom [of the stack had] crushed.” However, the driver was called as a witness by the appellant and denied ever having told anyone that he “thought there was something wrong about stack *394 ing a chicken box on top of a beef box.”

The appellant contends that all of this testimony regarding the out-of-court statements assertedly made by the driver should have been excluded as inadmissible hearsay, arguing that the statements could not be considered part of the res gestae of the accident because they were not made contemporaneously therewith or under such circumstances as to render them “free from all suspicion of . . . afterthought” within the contemplation of OCGA § 24-3-3, and that they could not be considered admissions by an agent imputable to the principal under OCGA § 24-3-33 because the driver was not shown to have been acting within the scope of his authority as an employee when he made the statements. See Gordon v. Athens Convalescent Center, 146 Ga. App. 134 (1), 135 (245 SE2d 484) (1978). While we tend to agree with the appellant that neither of these exceptions to the hearsay rule was applicable under the circumstances, we nevertheless conclude, for the following reasons, that the testimony was admissible.

“The hearsay definition in [OCGA § 24-3-1] speaks of rejecting hearsay because its probative value does not rest on the credit of the witness reporting it. This statement has been interpreted to mean that credit is established only after a statement has been subjected to cross-examination, and an out-of-court statement which is not subjected to cross-examination generally has insufficient credit to be admissible. The writers in the field of evidence and the courts generally agree that the lack of opportunity for cross-examination is the one most cogent reason for rejecting hearsay.” Green, Ga. Law of Evidence (3d ed.), § 219, p. 394. Accord Shelton v. Long, 177 Ga. App. 534 (1) (339 SE2d 788) (1986).

The appellant did, of course, have an opportunity to examine the declarant in the present case, since the declarant was present in court and in fact testified regarding what he had seen and whether he had made the statements attributed to him. Moreover, the reliability of the testimony offered by the appellee and the other two witnesses in this regard was enhanced by the fact that all three of them reported having heard the declarant say essentially the same thing. Because the declarant was present in court and because the testimony of these witnesses was thus corroborated, we hold that the trial court did not err in admitting it.

2. The evidence offered by the appellee, construed in favor of the verdict, was sufficient to support an inference that the accident had been caused by the negligence of the appellant’s employees in failing to stack the boxes on the truck in a stable and secure manner. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in denying the appellant’s motion for directed verdict.

3. The appellant complains that the jury was given an erroneous *395 charge on the definition of negligence. The court’s charge in this regard was as follows: “Now every person in our state or every corporation or firm or collection of individuals owes to every one else a duty not to harm those persons. . . . This is an affirmative legal duty, it is imposed by law, it goes with us by day and by night in all things. And so in [this] case the allegation is that where there was a duty on the part of [the appellant] not to injure [the appellee], yet it has done so. Not by criminal acts, that is not brought in here, nor by any claim or moral wrong doing[, b]ut by negligence. . . . Now simple negligence is easy to state. It is either doing what the law itself says should not be done which results in the injury or damage of someone, or simple negligence is a failing to do, that is an omission to act in such way that did bring about by such omission, such damage or injury.”

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Bluebook (online)
398 S.E.2d 403, 197 Ga. App. 392, 1990 Ga. App. LEXIS 1282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/t-j-morris-co-v-dykes-gactapp-1990.