9 Ala. 247 | Ala. | 1846
In Parker et al. v. Haggerty, 1 Ala. R. 632, a witness stated, that S occupied a lot under P, and as his tenant. This court said, “ The answer, instead of stating facts, states a conclusion of law from facts, which the witness knew himself, or had heard from others. Whether the relation of landlord and tenant existed between P and S, the jury could alone determine, under the direction of the court, as to the law arising out of the facts;” consequently the evi
2. It cannot be predicated of the reduction of the stage fare, about the last of 1848, or the beginning of the next year, that the line had become unprofitable, and consequently, the defendant, Aikin, was induced to deny his connection with its ostensible proprietors. The reduction of the charge for passengers, upon the establishment of an opposition line, only proves, that that previously fixed was too high. Such testimony is too inconclusive, and farfetched, to authorize a jury to say, that declarations of the defendant, elicited by the plaintiff himself, are untrue, when they do not conflict with it. It will not do to say, that the testimony should go to the jury, that they may judge of its effect; if it is irrelevant, or leads to no result, it is the duty of the court to exclude it, that the jury may not be misled or embarrassed by it.
3. The promise of four horses to the Defiance line, or rather W. W. Snow & Co. is somewhat equivocal, but certainly does not necessarily shorv, that he was to give them, or that they were to constitute either apart, or the whole, of his contribution to the stock of the company. It may with equal propriety be assumed, that he promised to sell the concert)
This view is decisive of the case ; the judgment is therefore affirmed,