71 Ga. 698 | Ga. | 1883
‘Complaint for land was brought, by defendant in error against the plaintiff in error. The title of the plaintiff in ejectment was a deed from the defendant in ejectment, .and the defence was that the deed was given to secure a debt which was usurious. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, but gave the defendant six months time to pay the note before the judgment was executed. The defendant below made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and the judgment overruling that motion is the error assigned.
At the time of the trial, Blount was alive and accessible. Had he been dead or beyond seas—without the jurisdiction of the court—then the interrogatories would have been admissible. Code, §3782. That section read's that “ the testimony of a witness, since deceased, ór disqualified, or inaccessible for any cause, given under oath in a former trial, upon substantially the same issue and between substantially the Same parties, may be proved by any one who heard it, and who professes to remember the substance of the entire testimony as to the particular matter about which he testifies.” Of course his written answers to interrogatories would therefore, by the spirit of the section, be admitted in case of death or inaccessibility; but we know of no law admitting them when the witness is alive and in an adjacent county of the state at the time of the trial.
In so far as the rulings of the court, the charges and refusals of requests to charge, conflict with the views above written, they are erroneous; and for the reasons above stated the verdict should have been set aside, and a new trial granted.
Judgment reversed,