9 Ga. App. 484 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
Counsel for the defendant in error ingeniously argue that the amount of the sale price, evidenced by the title-retaining note, and the highest proved value of the property are in this case identical, and that there can not be hurt to the plaintiff in error because the judge took the amount of the sale price to fix the sum for which he directed the verdict. He bases this contention on the fact that the highest estimate of value given by any witness tallied in amount with the sale price stated in the note. There is often a great difference between the highest estimate of value and the highest proved value of an article. Witnesses may vary in their estimates as to what the highest value of the property was between certain dates. Of course, the measure of damages which allows the plaintiff to take advantage of the highest proved value has reference to property which has changed in value between the dates in question, and allows the plaintiff to take the advantage nf recovering for the value of the property at that point during the period at which the property was worth the most, whether it be at the beginning of the period, at the end of the period, or at some intermediate time, but does not give him the right to recover the highest amount that any witness is willing to swear the property was worth, unless the jury believe that that witness has correctly estimated the value.