§ 9-10-184.Limitations on counsel on arguing damages; remedial measures for violations; conduct of voir dire as to damages
Chapter 10. Civil Practice and Procedure Generally · Article 8. Argument and Conduct of Counsel · Last amended 2025 · Last verified July 17, 2026
In one sentenceO.C.G.A. § 9-10-184 bars counsel from arguing a dollar value for noneconomic damages before the jury except after the close of evidence, requires that any such argument stay consistent between opening and closing, and ties enforcement to the remedial-measures and mistrial provisions of the next Code section.
(1)“Economic damages” means pecuniary damages recoverable in tort for bodily injury or wrongful death, including, but not limited to, damages for past and future medical expenses; costs of rehabilitation; costs of therapy; loss of wages; loss of income; loss of earning capacity; loss of services performed by the injured or deceased person as a result of the injury or death, including domestic and other necessary services performed without compensation; and funeral or burial expenses.
(2)“Noneconomic damages” means all damages recoverable in tort for bodily injury or wrongful death other than economic damages, including, but not limited to, damages for physical or emotional pain, discomfort, anxiety, hardship, distress, suffering, inconvenience, physical impairment, mental anguish, disfigurement, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of society and companionship, loss of consortium, injury to reputation, and in wrongful death cases, the nonpecuniary elements of the full value of life.
(b)Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c) of this Code section, in the trial of any action to recover damages for bodily injury or wrongful death, counsel shall not argue the worth or monetary value of noneconomic damages, and counsel shall not, in the hearing of the jury or any prospective juror, elicit any testimony regarding, or make any reference to, any specific amount or range of amounts of noneconomic damages, the measure of such damages being the enlightened conscience of an impartial jury.
(1)In the trial of any action to recover damages for bodily injury or wrongful death, counsel for any party shall be allowed to argue the worth or monetary value of noneconomic damages only after the close of evidence and at the time of such party’s first opportunity to argue the issue of damages, provided that such argument shall be rationally related to the evidence of noneconomic damages and shall not make reference to objects or values having no rational connection to the facts proved by the evidence.
(2)If counsel is entitled to the opening and concluding arguments, then counsel shall not be allowed to argue the worth or monetary value of noneconomic damages during such counsel’s concluding argument unless counsel has argued the worth or monetary value of noneconomic damages during such counsel’s opening argument, and such counsel shall not argue a different worth or monetary value of noneconomic damages in concluding arguments than was argued in such counsel’s opening argument.
(d)If counsel elicits any testimony, or makes any argument or reference, prohibited by this Code section in the hearing of the jury or one or more prospective jurors, the court shall take remedial measures as provided in Code Section 9-10-185 or shall, with respect to prospective jurors, excuse the prospective jurors.
(e)Nothing in this Code section shall be construed to prohibit counsel from asking prospective jurors during voir dire whether they could return a verdict that does not award any damages or a verdict in excess of some unspecified amount, provided that such question is supported by the evidence.
Plain-English Summary
This section addresses one of the most contested moments in a personal injury or wrongful death trial: what counsel can tell the jury a claim for pain and suffering is worth. It starts by defining the two categories at stake. Economic damages cover the pecuniary losses — medical bills, rehabilitation and therapy costs, lost wages and earning capacity, the value of services the injured or deceased person can no longer perform, and funeral or burial expenses. Noneconomic damages cover everything else tied to bodily injury or wrongful death — pain, mental anguish, disfigurement, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of consortium, and, in a death case, the nonpecuniary elements of the full value of life.
The general rule keeps a dollar figure for noneconomic damages away from the jury for most of the trial. Counsel cannot argue the worth of those damages, or elicit testimony or make any reference to a specific amount or range, in front of the jury or a prospective juror — the statute says the measure of noneconomic damages is the enlightened conscience of an impartial jury, not a number counsel supplies.
The exception opens only after the evidence closes. From that point on, counsel for each party may put a worth or monetary value on noneconomic damages, but only at that party’s own first opportunity to argue damages — plaintiff and defendant each get their own turn, not just whichever side happens to argue first — and the argument has to connect rationally to the evidence, with no reaching for objects or values that have nothing to do with the facts proved at trial. Counsel who gets both an opening and a concluding argument cannot save the dollar figure for the last word: they can argue a value in concluding only if they argued one in opening, and the number cannot change between the two.
Enforcement runs through the next Code section and through voir dire. If counsel crosses the line in front of the jury or prospective jurors, the court turns to the remedial measures and mistrial provisions of Code Section 9-10-185, or excuses the tainted prospective jurors. None of this stops attorneys from asking jurors during voir dire whether they could return a verdict of no damages, or one above some unspecified amount, as long as the evidence supports asking the question.
Frequently Asked Questions
What counts as noneconomic damages under this section?
All damages recoverable in tort for bodily injury or wrongful death other than economic damages, including pain, discomfort, anxiety, hardship, distress, suffering, inconvenience, physical impairment, mental anguish, disfigurement, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of society and companionship, loss of consortium, injury to reputation, and, in wrongful death cases, the nonpecuniary elements of the full value of life.
When can counsel argue a specific dollar value for noneconomic damages?
Only after the close of evidence, at the party’s first opportunity to argue the issue of damages, and only if the argument is rationally related to the evidence of noneconomic damages.
Can counsel argue a higher noneconomic damages figure in the concluding argument than in the opening argument?
No. If counsel argued a value in the opening argument, counsel cannot argue a different worth or monetary value of noneconomic damages in the concluding argument.
What happens if counsel violates these limits in front of the jury?
The court takes remedial measures as provided in Code Section 9-10-185, or, as to prospective jurors, excuses them.
Can attorneys ask jurors during voir dire about their willingness to award no damages or a large amount?
Yes. The section does not prohibit asking prospective jurors whether they could return a verdict awarding no damages, or one exceeding some unspecified amount, as long as the question is supported by the evidence.
Amendment History
Ga. L. 1960, p. 174, § 1; Ga. L. 2025, p. 19, § 1/SB 68, effective April 21, 2025.
Source & verification. Section text and amendment history are
reproduced verbatim from the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, published by the
Official Code of Georgia Annotated, Georgia Code Revision Commission / LexisNexis. Last verified July 17, 2026.
· Official source
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