3 Ga. App. 43 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
The defendant in error, a locksmith and repairer •of bicycles and automobiles, sued tbe plaintiff in error upon an open account, and tbe jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, for $181.65. The verdict was less than the amount sued for. The ■ original petition alleged an indebtedness of $152.75, but was .amended so as to read $186.65.
The alleged indebtedness was claimed to be due on account of ■ certain repairs and material furnished in the repairing of the ■ defendant’s automobile and bicycle during a period of seven months of the year 1905. He filed an answer denying the indebt- ■ edness and setting up a counter-claim for $600, for hire and dam
1, 2. The first and second grounds in the motion for new trial aver that the verdict is contrary to law and the evidence, and eon-, trary to justice and equitjc There was conflict in the evidence. The jury settled the issues of fact by preferring the testimony for-the plaintiff, and it was sufficient to authorize their finding. In a court for the correction of errors, the verdict of a jury should not be set aside upon the assignment of error that it is without evidence to support it, if there is any evidence to support it, unless it be further made to appear, (a) that some ruling of the court; improperly withheld evidence from the jury, (&) or illegally permitted the jury to consider testimony which should not have been submitted to them, (c) or that the court’s instructions, as applied to the evidence, were erroneous, inapplicable, or misleading. We held, in a former automobile case from Augusta, Murphy v. Meacham, 1 Ga. App. 155 (57 S. E. 1046): “The case depending upon disputed issues of fact arising from conflicting evidence,, the settlement-of which is solely for the jury, and the verdict having been approved by the trial judge, the judgment of the1 court below will not be disturbed.”
3. The third ground of the motion for new trial alleged the improper admission of the books of account of the plaintiff, under §5182 of the Civil Code. The books were properly and legally admitted. The conclusion of the opinion in Petit v. Teal, 57 Ga.
In the case at bar all the parties to the transaction were present .at the trial and testified as to their connection therewith, and the correctness of the same; the machinist who did the work, the clerk who sold the goods, the party who charged the items, the bookkeeper who sold some of the goods and kept the books, all testified; there were no missing links in the evidence. It can not be maintained that because the clerk, the proprietor, the machinist and the bookkeeper were all present and testified, the books themselves can not be introduced.. The books in such cases as this may not be immediate proof of the correctness of the account, but may be corroborative evidence of the other testimony as to the correctness of the account, and are admissible as a part of the
4. The court properly refused the request to charge as set out in the fourth ground of the motion for new trial. The court gave the correct portion of the instruction requested, relative to Fourcher’s alleged unauthorized use of Bush’s automobile, and as' to his liability for reasonable hire for its use, provided the evidence-disclosed any unauthorized use of the machine by Eburchei;, but declined to add the following: “And it would not be necessary for you to find that Fourcher used the machine every day, if you find he' made a practice of using it.” The evidence disclosed no contract for hire of the machine; on the contrary, the counter-claim was for its unauthorized use. As well put by counsel for defendant in error in his brief, “had this language been used, the jury would have been justified in making Fourcher 'liable for the entire amount of hire claimed, if they found that Fourcher made a ‘practice of using it.’ What would he have been liable for, had he made a practice of using it; say once a month for the seven months which it was in his care? Under the above language he would have been liable for $50 a month for the entire period; which would have been palpably wrong and unlawful.” The question, of hire for the alleged unauthorized use of the automobile was also fully and completely dealt with by the court in several other parts of the charge. There was no error on the part of the court in eliminating this language. In order for the refusal of a request to
5. The fifth ground of the motion for new trial complains of a. portion of the charge of the court upon the question of ratification by the defendant of work done upon his bicycle.' The charge excepted to is inapt in expression, and, if it had been the only reference to this subject, might have misled the jury, but we do* not think that the use of the words complained of, “ or accepted the property,” in the court’s charge, in the connection in which they were used, could have misled the jury, and the alleged harmful effect that it might have had upon the jury is forced and strained, when all of the sentence containing these words is considered. The sentence containing the alleged error is as follows: “If you find the charge reasonable and that authority was given, or, if authority was not given, that it was ratified by defendant, that he, after knowing it, agreed to it or accepted the property, then he would be liable.” In other words, the court stated that if the work done was ratified by the defendant accepting it with the property, knowing that it had been done, he would be liable. The question of ratification is clearly explained in the charge of the court a number of times in other language than that above quoted. When the whole sentence, to say nothing of the entire charge, is taken into consideration, it is not probable that the jury misunderstood the law upon the question of ratification. Brown v. Matthews, 79 Ga. 1 (4 S. E. 13); Wilson v. State, 69 Ga. 226; Smalls v. State, 105 Ga. 669 (4) (31 S. E. 571). Although the principal may expressly declare that he will not sanction the unauthorized act, a ratification may be shown from his act of acceptance. Byrne v. Doughty, 13 Ga. 53 (4); Haney School Furniture Co. v. Hightower Institute, 113 Ga. 295 (38 S. E. 761). It is well settled in Georgia that it is not essential that the principal should expressly ratify by word or writing; it’may be done by implication or by the subsequent acts
Fourcher had been doing this kind of work for Bush for a number of years, and receiving the orders to do the work in a manner similar to that used in connection with the bicycle. The work was done on Bush’s bicycle and he received the benefit.
Judgment affk'med.