76 Ga. 602 | Ga. | 1886
To say the least, the propriety of the court’s treating as an instrument embodying the terms of the contract, and construing it in such a manner as to bind the jury, every expression found in correspondence relating to the conduct of the business in pursuance of the contract, seems not in accordance with the provisions of the Code conferring the power and making'it the duty of the court to construe contracts, and other provisions qualifying and restricting this power, as’ interpreted by our judgments and as regulated by Common law rules. Hall's Self-Feeding Cotton-Gin Co. vs. Black, 71 Ga., 450, and citations; 2 Wharton’s Contracts, §450.
Judgment affirmed.