88 Ga. 275 | Ga. | 1892
Judgment affirmed.
Yisage sued Kendrick & Co. on an account for balance claimed to be due for mining ore, and obtained a verdict. Tbe defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled. The grounds of tbe motion were, (1-2) that the verdict was contrary to law and evidence, and (8) that the court erred in refusing to charge thus: “If the plaintiff received sixty-five cents per ton for ore mined i>y him, for the months of May, June and Juiy, or for any other series of consecutive months, and did not, at the time of receiving said payment, distinctly notify the defendants that he would insist upon the ten cents per ton additional, he cannot recover in this case.” The court in effect so charged, except he did not charge that the claim for the additional ten cents per ton should have been distinctly made at the time of receiving the sixty-five cents per ton.
For the defendants the testimony was: The contract was that the plaintiff was to have a place to mine. The Crabtree entry was given him as the place. He was to get seventy-five cents per ton payable monthly, for ore mined. He was employed to mine by the ton. . There was no definite time agreed upon, during which he was to mine at that price. It was not the agreement that he