The motion to dismiss the bill of exceptions has no merit. It is denied.
Special ground 1 of the motion for new trial assigns error upon the following portion of the trial court’s instructions to the jury:
“If you believe that the defendant, U. A. Lawson, came- to Mr. Whitehead, the president of the plaintiff corporation, and acknowledged the correctness of the account and every item thereof, and you believe that by a preponderance of the evidence, then you should find for the plaintiff.”
There was evidence that the open account sued upon had become an account stated. The charge objected to in this ground apparently was an attempt to charge on this issue.
An account stated is an agreement by which persons who have had previous transactions with each other fix the amount due in respect to such transactions and the one indebted promises payment of the balance.
Moore v. Hendrix & Hodges,
In order to convert an open account into an account stated, an oral agreement as to the amount and an oral promise to pay are sufficient.
Murray v. Lightsey,
The charge attacked in ground 1 was erroneous because it authorized a recovery for plaintiff as upon an account stated, if the jury found merely that defendant had made an oral admission to the correctness of the amount without a promise to pay the amount admitted or agreed to be correct. In the absence of a promise express or implied, to pay the amount agreed upon, the agreement, or admission as to the amount of the account, was not binding upon the defendant as an account stated.
Shores-Mueller Co. v. Bell,
“In an action on an account for the purchase price of merchandise delivered and not paid for, the admission by the defendant of the correctness of the account is sufficient to support
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a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.”
McKnight v. Anderson,
Thus, if the charge is construed as an attempt to charge with reference to an open account, it was erroneous because it required a verdict for the plaintiff if the jury found that defendant had acquiesced in the amount.
If construed as an attempt to charge with reference to an account stated, the instruction was erroneous because it left out an essential element of a stated account—i.e., a promise to pay.
Ground 3 assigns error upon the following part of the charge:
“I charge you further that if you find that plaintiff .sent a statement of the account through the mails, duly addressed, and that statement was received by the defendant, U. A. Lawson, and he did not object to it within reasonable time after its reception, in the absence of satisfactory excuse for not so objecting, the burden of proving the incorrectness of the account would be on- the defendant, U. A. Lawson, and if U. A. Lawson, the defendant, failed to carry the burden, you should give a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount due, if you find the same is due.”
Ground 2 assigns error upon another part of the charge substantially the same as that complained of in ground 3.
Since an admission by the defendant of the correctness of the account is sufficient to support a verdict in favor of the plaintiff
(McKnight v. Anderson,
The trial court erred in giving the charges complained of in grounds 2 and 3.
Ground 4 attacks a portion of the charge in which the court instructed the jury upon principles of partnership for the jury’s consideration of whether defendant Lawson was liable upon the account as a partner of Thurmond.
It was not essential to Lawson’s liability that a partnership exist between him and Thurmond, and this issue was not made by the pleadings. Nor was there any evidence which would authorize the charge, which imported to the jury that in the absence of other factors operative to create liability they might find defendant liable on the theory of a partnership.
The court erred in charging the jury on this theory.
The charge complained of in ground 5 of the motion for new trial was correct and applicable to the issues in the case.
Since the evidence may differ on the new trial, it is not necessary to rule upon the general grounds of the motion for new trial.
Judgment reversed on special grounds 1, 2, 8, and 4 of the motion for new trial.
