128 Ga. 596 | Ga. | 1907
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
It has been held by this court, and we do not desire to be understood as laying down any rule in conflict therewith, that, “To render the evidence of a witness, taken by written interrogatories, admissible in the first instance, the statute requires that two eom.missioners shall act in taking the depositions of the witness; and if for any reason the parties waive this provision of the statute, and agree that such may be taken by one commissioner, it is a compliance with the terms of the agreement which makes the execution legal, and authorizes the admission of the evidence so taken. It follows that, to bring about this result, the -terms of the agreement must be strictly observed.”1 Rooney v. Southern Association, 115 Ga. 400. In the case just cited the court said, “The terms of the agreement . . were neither strictly nor substantially observed.” In the case at bar, however, the witness dictated his answers to the interrogatories júst as;'he would have written them;
Judgment reversed.