109 Ga. 437 | Ga. | 1899
The determination of this case in the trial court depended upon a closely contested issue of fact as to which the testimony was directly conflicting. To an action upon promissory notes brought by W. W. Chisholm & Co. against Aspinwall, he set up the defense of payment, and introduced in evidence a receipt, signed by the plaintiffs, a copy of which is as follows: “Whereas E. Aspinwall has had several years business with our firm, covering various transactions, and whereas several notes given by said E. Aspinwall have been paid, and the same can not be found, now this is to certify that we have received payment in full of said E. Aspinwall for all claims of every character whatever to this date. This December 20th, 1889.” Though the giving of this receipt was subsequent in point of time to the-maturity of the notes sued on, the plaintiffs contended that these notes had
This court, in Holliday v. Griffith, 108 Ga. 803, ruled explicitly that “proving by parol what a given writing does not contain is as much forbidden as proving in this manner what it does contain.” The error of the court in admitting the evidence objected to in the present case constrains us .to order a new trial; for it is impossible to say that the testimony thus illegally allowed to go before the jury had no effect upon their finding. Judgment reversed.