18 Ga. 407 | Ga. | 1855
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
Our construction of this Statute is, that when either party,, in pursuance of its terms, makes a witness of the other, the-
The difficulty made by the Counsel for the defendant in error, in the language of the Statute, canjtasily be obviated by a.transposition of its terms, when its mranihg will become plain, as follows: . “Provided” (or if) “it be the plaintiff who refuses to appear and testify as aforesaid, and after said-continuances are exhausted, said action shall be. dismissed; or if the party who fails or refuses to be and appear, be the defendant in said cause, Ms plea or pleas and answer, if he-has filed any, shall be stricken out,” &c. Here I have changed no w«rd, and yet it must be entirely plain, that the meaning is such as we give to the language of the Statute.
But the Act does not ivijieratively require that the case should be dismissed, or the defence stricken out, even after the continuances are exhausted and the party summoned still-fails to attend. Such non-attendance might ensue from Providential cause; and in such case, it would be a great hardship, if his case were lost because of this, his misfortune. Hence, the- Act furnishes the alternative provision, that “ such other order may be taken and had in said cause as, in the discretion of said Court, may be just and proper.”
Our view, therefore, of this case is, that though the plain
From the best reflection and examination which we have-been able to bestow upon this case, we have arrived at the conclusion, that this is á liquidated demand, whether it be regarded as a promise to pay in money or specifics; for our law expressly provides that the latter may bear interest.
liquidation is a fixed and determinate valuation of things, which, before, were uncertain. A debt is liquidated toJten it is rendered certain what is due, and how much is due — cum cerium est an et quantum deleátur. That, certainly, need not be contemporaneous with the agreement out of which it results. Perhaps the difficulty in this case, on this point, grew out of the supposition, that this was necessary.
Now the agreement in this case was, that one fifth part of the crop was to bo paid to the defendant, when it was made. This was a measure of the amount which the defendant was to receive. When did that amount become certain ? Just when the defendant received and took possession of tho crop,, or of its proceeds ; he had knowledge of the amount, and he knew that to one fifth thereof ho was indebted to the plain