v.
HENDERSON
Lead Opinion
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
Whether the petition in the former suit did, in its one count, set forth more than one- distinct cause of action is not now a question for determination. The demurrer raising that point and the judgment of the court (unexcepted to) sustaining it make conclusive upon the parties, and upon the court in the trial of the present case, the proposition that the false arrest (including the false imprisonment — for it is manifest from the context that the expression, “false arrest,” as used’ in the quotations from the pleadings in the former case, referred to the imprisonment as well as to the arrest) was a separate and distinct cause of action from the alleged malicious prosecution which followed thereon. The fact that we doubt the soundness of that ruling makes no difference; it is now a postulate of the case.
Before deciding the point which controls this branch of the case, we will eliminate another proposition. It may be that the language employed in the amendment to the former suit, by which the plaintiff struck from the petition “any claim for damages” on the cause of action for false arrest, left the allegations as to the false arrest and false imprisonment still in the petition as a part of the transaction declared on as a malicious prosecution. Be that as it may, we will decide the case as if the former petition in its[*676] one count set up the three separate and distinct causes of action contained in the different counts of the joresent petition, and as if on January 28, 1909, the plaintiff struck out two of these causes of action, and was on March 30, 1909, nonsuited as to the third.
The point, the very serious point, which counsel for the plaintiff in error (the defendant in the lower court) makes, is that an amendment relates back to the date of the filing of the suit, and that when, on January 28, 1909, the plaintiff amended the petition in the former suit by striking out all causes of action except the one on account of the malicious prosecution, that amendment related back to the beginning of the suit and left the case as if the petition had been originally brought only for the malicious prosecution; so that when the case thus proceeding terminated in nonsuit, only a case for malicious prosecution could be renewed within six months thereafter.
We believe the true rule to be that if a petition contains two or more separate and distinct causes of action, each cause of action is to be tried and treated as if it were a separate and distinct case. In many instances the rules of pleading do allow separate and distinct causes of action to be joined in the same petition, though, as a matter of technical form and .of orderliness of procedure, there is a requirement that each shall be set forth in a separate count. Bach count, then, from a substantial point of view, is a separate suit; and the case made by the petition as a whole is determined as if separate suits had been filed and had been consolidated for the purposes of trial. Bor an analogue in criminal procedure, see Tooke v. State, 4 Ga. App. 495, 504 (61 S. E. 917). The requirement that the different causes of action shall be alleged in separate counts is technical only, and if the case proceeds to trial with the petition asserting two or more distinct causes of action in the same count, the case nevertheless stands as if a number of separate suits were on trial by consolidation. It seems expedient, logical, and altogether just to say that if a plaintiff should file a petition setting forth in separate counts a number of distinct causes of action, and afterwards should find that he was unable satisfactorily to proceed as to one of his counts, and should then strike or dismiss that count, the effect would be the same as if he had brought a like number of separate suits and had dismissed one of them; and that if the time required by the statute of[*677] limitations had been completed after the filing of the suit and before the dismissal of the count, the plaintiff should nevertheless be allowed to sue over upon the cause of action asserted in that count within six months from the time he struck it out or dismissed it. 'This is merely to give to the code section on the subject of renewal of actions that liberal, common-sense construction which the courts are accustomed to say should be given it. See Cox v. Strickland, 120 Ga. 104 (47 S. E. 912) (especially at bottom of page 111 and top of page 112), and authorities there cited. If by technical delinquency the plaintiff has joined two distinct causes of action in the same count, he should be allowed to strike out or dismiss one of them on like terms; for one of the very objects of the renewal statute is to give the plaintiff the right to sue over without the embarrassment of the bar of the statute of limitations, where in the first suit he attempted to assert a cause of action, but “by some accident, or inadvertence or variance, not affecting the real merits of the case, was compelled to dismiss.” Moss v. Keesler, 60 Ga. 44, 47. That the right to claim the benefit of the statute may apply as to a part of a case only (if that part relates to a distinct and entire cause of action) is shown by the Civil Code (1910), § 4382, where it is given to a'defendant whose plea of set-off has been disposed of without a hearing on the merits.
In our opinion, the rule insisted upon by able counsel for the plaintiff in error, that amendments relate back to the beginning of the suit, does not destroy this right of renewal in cases such as those we have been discussing. The prime object of the rule is the saving of causes of action, not the destroying of them. It is a general rule, but it has its exceptions. When an amendment merely perfects, either in form or in substance, the manner in which a particular cause of action has been stated, it relates back to the beginning of the suit, so far as that cause of action is concerned, and makes the procedural perfection finally attained as to that cause of action a perfection ab initio; but there are cases into which new and distinct causes of action are inserted by amendment (though the contrary is the general rule, of course), and in such cases the amendment does not relate back, and the causes of action contained in the petition prior to the introduction of the new cause of action are in nowise affected. Cf. Bentley v. Crummey, 119 Ga. 911 (47 S. E. 209).
[*678] The amendment involved in this ease was twofold in its consequences. As to the allegations respecting the cause of action for malicious prosecution, it fulfilled the proper offices of an amendment, i. e., it relieved the statement of that cause of action of the procedural imperfection of being joined in the same count with the statement of another cause of action; and as to that cause of action it related back to the beginning of the case and made the perfection attained as to it a perfection ab initio. But as to the cause of áction for the false arrest it operated quite differently; as to the statement of that cause of action it was no amendment at all, but was a dismissal; and dismissals do not relate back to the beginning of the suit, at least so far as counting time under the code section as to renewals of actions is concerned.
We are of the opinion that the trial court properly held that the plaintiffs causes of action, so far as the questioned counts are concerned, were not barred. In holding this we think that we are applying the rule on the subject according to its reason as so-ably set forth by Mr. Justice Lamar in the case of Cox v. Strickland, 120 Ga. 104, 109 (47 S. E. 912); “Statutes of limitation are based partly on the theory that non-action by a plaintiff tends to throw his adversary off guard, making him careless in the preservation of receipts, vouchers, documents, and other evidence needful for his defense. But when a suit is pending, whether it be brought with technical correctness or not, the defendant is warned to preserve his evidence. The attempted assertion by judicial proceedings of a cause of action in which A gives B notice of his claim is sufficient to stop the running of the statute during the pendency of that suit, and for six months thereafter. In like manner, if B in the same suit, by a set-off or cross-bill (Civil Code, § 3787 [Civil Code (1910), § 5282]; Crane v. Berry, 60 Ga. 362; Hunt v. Spaulding, 18 Pick. 521), or other appropriate proceeding, should attempt to enforce his cause of action against the plaintiff or other party to the proceedings, the statute would likewise be tolled as to this claim. Notice had been given. The opposite party was warned. If the suit was disposed of on any matter not concluding the merits of the cause of action, or any [italics ours] of the causes of action, asserted in the proceeding by one party against another, it might be thereafter seasonably renewed in the proper forum, in proper form, against any of the proper and all of[*679] the necessary parties therein.” See also Atlanta, K. & N. Ry. Co. v. Wilson, 119 Ga. 781 (47 S. E. 366).
[*680]
The Civil Code (1910), § 5764, provides: “Pedigree, including descent, relationship, birth, marriage, and death, may be proved either by the declarations of deceased persons related by blood or marriage, or by general repute in the family, or by genealogies, inscriptions, ‘family trees/ and similar evidence.” In Imboden v. Etowah Co., 70 Ga. 86, it was held in general language that hearsay as to death is admissible. In Williams v. State, 86 Ga. 548, 550 (12 S. E. 743), the generality of this statement was criticised. While, in a sense, hearsay is admissible to prove death, yet the hcarsa3r must come up to the requirements of the code section quoted above. Cf. Augusta R. Co. v. Randall, 85 Ga. 297 (3) (11 S. E. 706). See also Travelers Ins. Co. v. Sheppard, 85 Ga. 751 (10) (12 S. E. 18). The evidence was properly excluded.
The error complained of is that the court instructed the jury, in effect, that under the first count, as well as under the second, they might award damages to the plaintiff for the physical suffering (including the shock to her nervous system) which she experienced through her illness which she claimed was brought about by the false imprisonment, though no such damages were claimed or alleged in the first count. The point seems to be well taken. While[*686] it is true that the court correctly read the plaintiffs petition and the various counts thereof to the jury, still, as he was repeatedly reminding them throughout the charge that he would inform them later as to how they should assess the damages in the event they found the defendant liable, and did at the close of the charge 'give these erroneous instructions, we can not say that the jury was not misled. There is a possibility that the jurors decided that the plaintiff ought to have $5,000 for the wrong done her by the false arrest and imprisonment, considered as one continuous and connected transaction, and that, having agreed on this amount, they proceeded to divide.it into two parts, in order to comply with the directions of the judge as to the form of their verdict; but as judges we have no right to assume that they did any such thing; for, under the law and under the charge of the court, it was their duty to consider and to find as to each count separately. If the ¡fiaintiff had not divided the transaction into parts and made each part a separate cause of action, there would he no trouble in sustaining the verdict, but the fact that confronts us is that the division exists. Under all the facts of the case the false imprisonment was a much more serious cause of damage than the false arrest. The point is made that $3,500 for the false arrest alone is excessive. It will not be necessary for us to malee an authoritative ruling on that point. -However, in the light of the decision in the case of Fire Association v. Fleming, 78 Ga. 733 (3 S. E. 420), in which Mr. Justice Hall denounced the verdict of $1,000 for an arrest without warrant as so excessive as to show bias or misapprehension on the part of the jury, there is much plausibility in the point. It must be kept in mind that the verdict of the jury on the third count is in effect a finding that probable cause existed for a prosecution of the plaintiff, though it was afterwards ascertained that she was not guilty. If there was probable cause for a prosecution, there was reasonable ground for an arrest. The verdict, taken as a whole, must be construed as finding that the actionable wrong which the defendant committed, so far as the first count is concerned, was not in causing her to be arrested, but in not getting a warrant. The arrest was in private, and, standing alone, was not accompanied by specially aggravating circumstances. If the jury believed the-plaintiff’s version of the case, the damages assessed are very moderate so far as the second count is concerned;[*687] but this is not true as to tlie first count. As to tlie second count, the case was fairly and legally tried throughout; as to the first count there is an error of serious import. We make this statement in explanation of the direction we are about to give the case. We are of the opinion that the proper disposition of the case, under all the circumstances, is to affirm the judgment, on condition that the plaintiff will voluntarily write off the recovery had on the first count, thus relieving the case of all effects of the error, but that otherwise a new trial be had of the case as a whole.
Judgment affirmed, on condition.
Concurrence
concurring specially.
In concurring in the judgment of the court in this ease, and as to the point passed on in the tenth division of the opinion, I do not wish to be understood, even in the light of Judge Hall’s decision in Fire Association v. Fleming, 78 Ga. 733 (3 S. E. 420), as agreeing to the proposition that the verdict upon the first count was excessive. I conceive it to be the right of the jury to fix an amount even as large as that of the verdict upon that count, for the damages resultant upon an unlawful arrest, if the attendant circumstances in a particular case authorize such an exercise of their discretion. But in view of the fact that the ruling of the trial court in the previous litigation was not excepted to, and thereby became the law of this case, this court, as well as the lower court, is bound to the proposition that the transaction dealt with, in the plaintiff’s petition can not be considered as one continuing cause of action, but must be treated as three causes of action entirely separate and distinct.
Dissent
dissenting.
I concur in all of tlie views so clearly and forcibly expressed by Judge Powell in his opinion for the majority of the court, except as to that portion embraced in the. tenth division of the opinion and tlie tenth headnote. After a most careful consideration of the evidence and the charge of the learned trial judge, referred to and discussed by Judge Powell, I do not think that the charge relating to the damages on the first count contained a material error which in any manner misled or confused the jury; nor do I think that this court can say, under the facts, that the amount of the verdict found on this count was excessive; and I therefore can not concur in the conclusion of the majority of the court that the verdict rendered[*688] on this first count in behalf of the plaintiff should be written off under penalty of another trial.
The petition contained three counts. The first count claimed damages for the illegal arrest. The second count claimed damages resulting from false imprisonment following this illegal arrest; and the third count claimed damages for the malicious prosecution following the illegal arrest and false imprisonment; all türee of the counts laying the amount of the damages at the arbitrary sum of $10,000. The damages resulting to the plaintiff from each one of the wrongful acts complained of, to wit, the illegal arrest, the false imprisonment, and the malicious prosecution, seem to me to be substantially the same, although there may have been some greater elaboration of these grounds in the second and third counts than in the first count. But after all, considered from a reasonable and practical viewpoint, it seems to me that the character and extent of the damages claimed for each one of the three wrongful acts complained of do not substantially vary; and it is altogether reasonable to conclude that the jury, in considering the question of damages, did not make any very critical analysis of each character of the damages flowing from each separate wrongful act, or make concrete application to each count, but in all probability' considered all the wrongs complained of, as one continuing tort, and endeavored by the verdict to compensate the plaintiff for all the wrongs for which they found the defendant was responsible.
It is insisted that the former ruling of the superior court, acquiesced in by both parties, that the proper legal procedure was to separate the items of damages into counts, was binding upon the court and the jury, and that the jury were therefore compelled to consider each question separately, and to award damages appropriate to each separate count, and not give a lump'sum for all the acts complained of. This may be the sound legal view, but I have no idea that the jury, in fixing the amount of damages, were very greatly influenced by this technical view of legal pleading.
It is said by Judge Powell that the judge committed an error which may have misled the jury, in that he instructed them, on the first count, that they might consider certain elements of damages not claimed as grounds of damages in that count, but which were contained in the second and third counts, and that this instruction may have led the jury to give too large a verdict on the first count[*689] for the unlawful arrest. The judge charged, as follows on the question of damages: “Now, she sets up, gentlemen, she suffered damages on each of these counts to which I have called your attention, for humiliation and for her wounded feelings, for her suffering mental and physical, for her disgrace amongst her friends and people who knew her, and humiliation, and that it affected her nervous system so that she suffered a nervous shock for two weeks or more, and asks to recover damages, laying her damages on each one of the counts at $10,000. Well, gentlemen, the same rule or measure of damage would apply on each one of .these counts, and it is left to the enlightened consciences of impartial jurors to say what the amount of damages would be, if she recovers in the case. It would be your duty to look into the character of the wrong done her, if she was wronged, in each count; what effect it had as to causing her suffering; what effect it had as to causing her humiliation; what its tendency was as to disgracing her before the public, amongst her friends; and, desiring to be fair,” etc. T think the learned trial judge, in thus summing up all the grounds of damages which the jury were authorized to consider, was really making a summary of all the damages claimed in the three counts, and did not intend to make a distinct and separate statement of the grounds of damages set out in each of the separate counts. It would probably have been more accurate for him to have separated the items of damages claimed on each count, but I can not bring my mind to believe that because he summed up all the damages, he thereby confused the issues submitted to the jury or misled them into giving too large an amount on the first count. Of course, the statement made by the learned’ judge that the measure of damages on each count was the same was correct, the measure being the enlightened conscience of impartial jurors. It must be conceded that the plaintiff was entitled t'o some damages, under the verdict on the first count, for the illegal arrest. This first count sets up that by the illegal arrest the plaintiff was “greatly humiliated and damaged in her feelings and reputation,” but mentions no other element of damages, except punitive damages. In considering the evidence applicable to this count and the resulting damage from the wrong-complained of, the allegations permit a very broad scope to the jury. IIow much was she entitled to for the illegal arrest? She says it greatly humiliated her, and damaged her in her feelings and repu[*690] tation. If she was entitled to any damages for the false imprisonment, she certainly was entitled to damages for the illegal arrest. Not only could the jury, under this first count, give her damages as compensation for wounded feelings and humiliation, but they were also authorized on this count to give punitive damages. I can not bring my mind to the conclusion that the $3,500 found on this count, under the allegations and the proof (even when considered in connection with the allegations of this count only), was excessive.
I do not concur in the statement in the opinion that the verdict on the third count necessarily found that while the arrest was illegal, it was not malicious. There was contention — in fact one of the principal defenses relied on as to the third count was — that the prosecution of the plaintiff was not by authority of the. defendant, but that the case was prosecuted without its consent and without its authority; and the judge very properly instructed the jury, as to this question, that before they could find a verdict for the plaintiff on this count, they must find, from a preponderance of the evidence, that the prosecution was without probable cause, was malicious, and was by authority of the defendant. It is not beyond the evidence to conclude that the jury may have thought that the prosecution was both malicious and without probable cause, yet that the defendant was not responsible for the prosecution and was not liable on this count. The decision in the Fleming case, supra, cited by Judge Powell, and by Judge Pussell in his specially concurring opinion, I think does not furnish legitimate ground for holding that the verdict on the first count in this, case, under the allegations of damages in that count, was in any sense excessive. I might dispose of the point by stating that the Justice who wrote the opinion in that case was simply expressing his personal view on the amount of the verdict. He did not speak for the court, .for that question was not an issue in the case. The facts in that case did not show that the plaintiff was actually arrested, but showed that his arrest was constructive, and-was attended with no element whatever of aggravation, either in the act Or the intention, and it may have been true that under the facts of that case $1,000 was excessive. In the present case there was an actual arrest without a warrant. The verdict found that there was great humiliation and damage to the feelings of the plaintiff. Judge Powell justly says[*691] that there were certain facts of aggravation, which the jury might well have considered on the question of punitive damages, to wit, the refusal of the defendant or its agent to permit the plaintiff to go to her home, where she had three small female children, to make necessary provision for their protection while she was under arrest and away from them. To sum the whole matter up, and without extending this discussion, which is necessarily without profit, save as a matter of personal satisfaction to the Judge who renders the dissent, I do not think the charge complained of was so confusing and misleading as to require the direction that the plaintiff write off the amount of the verdict on this count or take the risk of total loss of compensation for the wrongs done her; and I certainly think that under the facts of the case we can not say that the verdict was excessive under the first count, in view of the very broad latitude which the law gives to the jury in determining the amount of damages of this character.