115 Ga. 1017 | Ga. | 1902
This case originated in a justice’s court, the same being an action' upon an open account instituted by Aug. Mencken & Bro. against the Freeman & Turner News Co., a partnership, and the members thereof, to recover a balance alleged to be due upon a bill for cigars sold to that firm. The defense interposed to this suit was that the defendants had “ been endamaged by the said Aug. Mencken & Bro. in the sum of eighty-six dollars and thirty-one cents ($86.31), for that the said Aug. Mencken & Bro. shipped to defendants certain tobacco and cigars in which there were tobacco worms; that these worms were scattered throughout
Upon this branch of the case, the court further instructed the jury as follows: “If defendants purchased these cigars, and they were sound and free from fault at the time [they] purchased them, and after they purchased them worms developed in them, and the development of the worms in the cigars was one of the risks incident to the tobacco trade, and the defendants suffered damages in consequence of the worms coming into the tobacco, the loss on that account would fall on defendants in the case; just as if a person should buy eggs, potatoes, or apples that were sound at the time they were purchased, and rot or disease should subsequently develop in them, the loss should fall on the purchaser rather than the seller.” Complaint is made of this charge, on the ground that the court thereby “injected into the case an issue upon which there was no testimony,” it not having been shown “by plaintiff that tobacco worms and bugs were natural to tobacco, as rot and decay of cabbage, apple, and potato or tomato.” Our reply to this contention is that a witness introduced in behalf of the plaintiff testified as follows: “ I am a tobacconist, and have been familiar with the cigar and tobacco business for twenty years. There are two kinds of worms or bugs which get into tobacco. One is a little gray bug or worm, and the otheris brown. These worms or bugs are very often found in tobacco, especially in hot weather. During May or June tobacco usually goes through what we call a sweating period, and fermentation sets in and the bugs are then hatched out. I don’t know whether the bugs cause the fermentation or the fermentation causes the bugs. • Such bugs or worms are likely to appear in any tobacco, and I do not consider their appearance any evidence of anything improper in the manufacture of tobacco. The worms or bugs are likely to get into tobacco at any stage, and of course it would be possible for them to get into the tobacco before it was made. . . We have trouble with worms or bugs almost every season ; and, as I understand it, they are likely to come particularly in warm, damp atmospheres.”
In another ground of the motion for a new trial exception is taken to the refusal of the judge to give in charge to the jury a
As to the general grounds of the motion, it need only be said that a careful perusal of the brief of the evidence satisfies us that the verdict of the jury was not, as claimed by the plaintiffs in error, unauthorized under any view of the testimony adduced at the trial.
Judgment affirmed.