47 Ga. App. 554 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1933
Mattie Brooks, as temporary administratrix of the estate of Calvin Eiley, deceased, brought an action against Alex K. Sessoms, as a common carrier, to recover damages for the homicide of Calvin Eiley. The plaintiff was nonsuited, and he excepted.
The plaintiff alleged that the defendant was a common carrier, and the defendant specifically denied this allegation, thus making this a material issue in the case. On this issue the plaintiff offered the testimony of J. H. Williams, who testified in part as follows: “After I got hold of this case I thought Mr. Sessoms was operating under the workmen’s compensation act, so -this matter was taken up with Mr. Sessoms and Mr. Garrett, and they said at that time that the road was a common carrier and did not come under the workmen’s compensation act. This letter followed a visit to Waycross, when I had this matter discussed in this letter in controversy. They orally admitted to me during the conversation what I just said. I don’t remember whether or not at that time Mr. Garrett said anything about his employment in the case. There was no suit filed at that time. I was trying to determine whether or not this accident came under the workmen’s
The complaint in ground 4 of the bill of exceptions is of the exclusion of the following letter, dated July 29, 1930.
"Mr. J. H. Williams, attorney at law, Douglas, Georgia.
“Dear Mr. Williams: We acknowledge receipt of your letter of July 29th in which you request us to submit to you a brief and
“Yours very truly, Parks & Garrett, by Q. L. Garrett.
“Copy to Mr. A. K. Sessoms, Cogdell, Ga.”
In addition to the testimony of J. PI. Williams set out above, he further testified that he received the letter with the said notation at the bottom thereof: “Copy to Mr. A. K. Sessoms [defendant], Cogdell, Ga.,” and that it was not received in response to.an oiler of compromise. This letter was offered not as opinion evidence, but as an admission made by the defendant’s attorney, and inferentially concurred in and adopted by the defendant. The defendant contends that the reasoning in the case of Kitchen v. Robbins, supra, is in point, and “that it does not make any difference whether the letter was opinionative evidence or not, if it became opinionative evidence by the expression on the part of the defendant or his counsel, so long as it was offered as an admission.” It is true in discussing the admission of the adverse party to the causé, in the Kitchen case the court said (headnote 2) : “When one party puts the other as a witness on the stand under our statute, he is entitled to have his belief as well as his knowledge.” It is well to note the careful wording of this headnote — “to have his belief as well as his knowledge.” In defining belief, Black’s Law Dictionary says: “The distinction between the two mental conditions [knowledge and belief] seems to be that knowledge is an assurance of a fact or proposition founded
Grounds 2 and 3 of the bill of exceptions relate to certain alleged irregularities during the course of the trial. Whether or not there is merit in these grounds need not be determined, since it is highly improbable that the same questions will be raised upon another trial of the case.
If the proof had established that the defendant was a common carrier, the evidence would have entitled the plaintiff to go to the jury on the question of negligence. The plaintiff’s right to go to the jury under the evidence in this case was not dependent solely upon the presumption arising against the defendant upon proof that the plaintiff was injured as a result of the operation of the defendant’s train. Central of Ga. Ry. Co. v. Francis, 40 Ga. App. 383 (4) (149 S. E. 806).
Because of the error above indicated, the further proceedings in the case were nugatory.
Judgment reversed.