The appellee sued the appellant on open account for the unpaid balance due on the sale of building materials. Judgment was based on a jury verdict in the аppellee’s favor, and the appellant appeals.
The appеllee furnished lumber to the appellant, a general contractor, for an apartment project. A lien was placed on the property. The owner of the rеalty subsequently desired to have the lien removed from its property. The appellеe agreed to release the lien in consideration of payment by the owner of over $10,000 of the approximately $15,000 owed to the appellee by the appellant. To that end, the appellee signed a document entitled "Waiver of Lien,” releasing their lien on the owner’s property. The document concluded "The [appellee] hereby certifies that all labor and/or materials furnished or used on the above-described premises for which this waiver of lien is executed have been paid in full.”
In the instant case, the appellee sued the appellant for the $5,122.05 balance remaining on the account. The appellee pleaded accord and satisfaction. There is evidence that the appellee never intended to rеlease the appellant from its obligation by its "Waiver of Lien.”
1. The appellant оbjected to the admission in evidence of a certain letter allegedly mailed by the appellee to the appellant. The objection was overruled. Earliеr in the trial, however, the letter was completely read into the transcript under oаth, and no objection was raised to that testimony.
"Where a party to a cause on trial permits, without objection the introduction of irrelevant and inadmissible testimony, the refusаl of the court to sustain an objection subsequently urged, to the admission of substantially the same evidence as that already admitted, will not work a new trial. The failure to object sooner may be deemed to be a waiver of the objection.” Cooley v. Bergstrom,
2. Another enumeratiоn of error deals with that portion of the charge concerning failure to answer a letter and admission by silence. The appellant objected at trial to the charge only "on the grounds that it is not applicable to the facts.” Based upon this court’s ruling in Harper v. Ga. S. & F. R. Co.,
3. The appellant claims that the trial judge erred in his сharge on accord and satisfaction. When the initial charge on this principle was the subject of objection by the appellant, the court proposed language for a recharge of that portion to which objection was made. The judge thеn requested objections from counsel as to the proposed wording. No objeсtions were offered. After the jury was recharged with the proposed language, the аppellant again failed to voice any objection. The appellant’s fаilure to except to the recharge, as required by Code Ann. § 70-207 (a) (Ga. L. 1965, pp. 18, 31; 1916, pp. 493, 498; 1968, рp. 1072, 1078), constitutes a waiver. Gibson’s Products Co. v. Mansfield,
4. The appellant claims that the waiver of lien was clеar, unambiguous, and subject to only one interpretation; the appellant claims thаt both the appellant and the property owner were released from all obligаtions to the appellee by the documents. It might be more reasonable, however, to construe the waiver of lien to be exactly what its name implies — the waiver of а lien against property and not the waiver of a third party’s obligations under an open account. Furthermore, it would be reasonable to construe the sentence of the document in which the appellee stated that "all labor and/or materials furnished on the above described premises . . . have been paid in full” as meaning that the reсipient of the waiver, i.e., the property owner, did not owe the appellee any further money. After application of the rules of construction, we find an ambiguity to еxist in the
5. At oral argument, the appellant waived its enumeration of error dealing with the trial court’s denial of its motion for summary judgment.
Judgment affirmed.
