112 So. 120 | Ala. | 1927
In Boutwell v. Spurlin Mercantile Co.,
No reversible error was committed in sustaining objection to defendant's question:
"I will ask you if in answer to interrogatories by the defendant about the gallon of gas, if you said that item of one gallon of gasoline was sold to Berrill Hatcher, that he gave out of gas while driving in front of my place of business?"
The witness was not shown his former interrogatories sought to be inquired about. Central of Georgia v. Wilson (Ala. Sup.)
The testimony of Brannon sufficiently identified the account presented to have been that of plaintiff's on which recovery was sought, and the method sought by the interrogatories was for an orderly statement of fact of presentment of the account to defendant, and that he made no objection to its correctness. The evidence was material and competent under count 2, declaring as it does upon an account stated between plaintiff and defendant.
The questions of defendant, referring to a Ford car, or, "How did you get its ignition?" called for irrelevant and incompetent evidence. The defendant had declared by his evidence that his Ford car "did not use any batteries," and hence defendant had testified what he was again seeking by indirection to show. It may be that an expert would know that such car was operated from a magneto, or may be operated from a battery. However the fact may be, counsel did not inform the court the purpose of the evidence sought, and the court was not required to cast about for reasons for which the evidence was offered. Analogy is to be found in Lester v. Jacobs,
In charge 2 given for plaintiff the word "bound" will be treated as "barred." Its context so informs, as well as other given instructions — the oral charge of the court correctly defining the law of such phase of the case and declaring that the statute of limitations of three years would bar the account, and the specific instruction of when the statute of limitations would begin to run. There was a reasonable inference from the evidence from which the jury may infer that the account was a stated account. Burns v. Campbell,
Charges refused, Nos. 3 and 5, were affirmative instructions and properly so ruled under the evidence containing conflicting tendencies.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and BROWN, JJ., concur.