64 Ga. 243 | Ga. | 1879
This suit was brought on an open account by the plaintiffs against the defendants as partners. These partners were
Our law on this subject is plainly and fully presented in the Code' — section 3777 — and is as follows:
‘‘The books of account of any merchant, shop-keeper, physician, blacksmith, or other person doing a regular business and keeping daily entries thereof, may be admitted in evidence as proof of such accounts, upon the following conditions:
“1. That he kept no clerk, or else the clerk is dead, or otherwise inaccessible.
“ 2. Upon proof (the party’s oath being sufficient) that the hook tendered is his book of original entries.
‘‘8. Upon proof (by his customers) that he usually kept correct books.
“4. Upon inspection by the court to see if the books are free from any suspicion of fraud.”
This codification of the Georgia law upon this subject embodies the substance of the adjudications of this court from Kelly to this day. 1 Kelly, 233; 5 Ga., 239 ; 8 Ib., 74; 13 Ib., 496, 508; 17 Ib., 65; 18 Ib., 318, 457,
■ Nor does our law differ much — not at all except in some details — from the laws of the other states, and,'indeed, of most of the civilized world, including the mother country. See 2 Phillips on Ev., note 491, p. 682 et seq., and cases there cited, where the whole subject is discussed, and very similar conclusions to those summarized in our Code are reached.
From this summary, which is our law by our own statute embodied in our Code, whether supported or not by other authority (though it is so supported), it would seem clear that the evidence of books is secondary, and introduced only when no other evidence can be got — ex necessitate rei.
Therefore, if the sale-clerks of the party who offers the books be alive and accessible, he cannot prove even an ordinary account by the books; because he has better evidence in the clerks who sold and delivered the goods. Moreover, if he had a book-keeper accessible, that bookkeeper, not himself, must prove that the books are the books of original entry ; because that book-keeper is a clerk, and his absence must be accounted for, his evidence being the test of the entries which he, the clerk or book-keeper, made.
Erom an examination of the evidence in the record, it appears that the clerks who sold the goods were both alive and not inaccessible — at least there was no proof of death or of their being beyond seas — -or otherwise out of reach of process of the court. There appear also to have been two book-keepers, one was proven to be dead, but the other was not accounted for, yet the party was permitted to prove the books to be those of original entries, contrary to the ruling in 13 Ga., 508, and when he himself appears not to have made a single entry therein. The evidence of the two salesmen was the best, 18 Ga., 693; 20 Ga., 365, and in
The charge of the court seems so to regard them, and the judge nowhere called the attention of the jury to those items as not included in the proof which the books were competent to make, if competent at all. His entire charge is not in the record; but the extracts from it show no such exception. So in regard to cash payment of drafts, etc.,' which the hooks could not establish as due by the defend-, ants to the plaintiffs. See 8 Ga., 74 ; 57 Ga., 145 ; Code, §3777.
On the whole, we think that the question in this case on this point was not submitted clearly and fully to the jury. It is, as appears from Parsons above cit.ed, a question mixed of law and fact for court and jury; and we think that the court should have charged that Ellsworth could not be held liable for these debts of the old firms unless he had assumed them, and that the jury must be satisfied from the evidence that he did assume them as a member of the new firm— that he authorized the transfer, and considered the debt that of the new firm, of which he was a member — that this agreement could be established by circumstances as well as direct proof, such as payments made on the old accounts by the new firm, with his knowledge and consent, or other equivalent circumstances, if any, but always such as to bring home knowledge of what was being done to him.
On the whole we are quite clear that the case should be tried over, and that the court erred in not granting the new trial. Therefore the judgment is reversed.
Judgment reversed.