15 Ga. 395 | Ga. | 1854
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
When what was thus said, is substantially stated, if* the testtimony be not clear and definite, cross-examination should per
' Especially is it erroneous for the Court, in his charge to the Jury, to apply this rule, when no objection has been made to the testimony.
It is true, that the acknowledgment will have no binding efficacy, if it be vague, and go only to the extent of admitting some general indebtedness. There should be an acknowledgment of a particular debt, as then due. From this, as we have said, the law implies a promise to pay. (Angel on L. 254, 260. Martin vs. Broach, 6 Ga. R. 21.)
In the 2d interrogatory, the plaintiff’s counsel requests this witness to look upon the annexed account, and state all that "he knew, going to show that Nathaniel H. Bulloch owed the plaintiff. That account contained the following item: “To value of negro man Jerry, $800”. Now, to this request, as thus submitted, the witness replies, that on, a particular occasion, and at a certain place, N. II. Bulloch “acknowledged the justice of the claim for the negro man Jerry”. What cláim ? Surely, that to which the attention of the witness had been called, as it appeared in the account. We think this a fair and proper construction. If it were not the meaning of
The abstract proposition, as presented by the counsel, is correct. But the promise wras not such as he supposes. The clear and definite statement of the witness is—-first, that the defendant’s intestate acknowledged the justice of certain items, in the account. Secondly, that he promised to1 pay them at that time, if the creditor would take payment in a certain piece of land, at the value of $1200. Not that he would pay only in land, if the same were taken at the price aforesaid; but that he would pay at that time', in land, if taken at that price. There is nothing in such terms, which can be held to modify the absolute promise to pay, which is to be implied from all else that was said by the intestate.
Judgment reversed.