20 Ala. 123 | Ala. | 1852
This was an action of assumpsit, brought by Cosper against Lundie, to recover upon a contract, by which Cosper undertook to haul from Atlanta, Georgia, five thousand five hundred pounds of goods, wares and merchandize, to the store of Lundie, in Randolph county, at the price of one dollar per hundred pounds. There was a" verdict and judgment for the plaintiff in the court below.
It appears from the bill of exceptions, that there was evidence conducing to prove that Lundie, having goods, &c., at Atlanta, employed Cosper to haul the same at one dollar per one hundred pounds, and that one of the terms of the contract was, that the latter should start with his wagons for the
What the agent said, as to the goods having been shipped ten days before they were called for by Cosper, was objected to by the plaintiff in error, but allowed by the court.
The jury were instructed, that if Cosper agreed to start on a particular day, and did not do it, but did start on a day subsequent, and that if the goods had been sent off by the agent, so that the plaintiff could not have obtained them by starting at the time agreed on, the defendant would be liable to the plaintiff for such damages as he had sustained by not obtaining the goods to haul, &c.
We are of opinion that the court mistook the law, both in the admission of the declaration of the agent, or warehouse man, that the goods had been shipped ten days before, and in the charge given to the jury.
The agent’s admission, or declaration, related to a past fact, with which it had no connection, was not made in pursuance of any authority from the constituent, nor connected with any authorized act as explanatory of it, so as to constitute part of the res gestae. 1 Greenl. Ev. § 113; Williams v. Hackelford, 16 Ala. Rep. 318; 24 Eng. C. L. Rep. 112; 5 ib. 454; 17 ib. 133; 24 ib. 353; 28 ib. 273. In this case, the agent’s reply to the party presenting the order for the goods, that there were none there belonging to Lundie, was admissible ; for that was apart of the transaction, and necessary in. order to show his failure to comply with the order of the-principal; but that portion of his declarations, relating to a transaction which had taken place ten days before, is not evidence to prove the past fact to which they relate. They constitute hearsay evidence merely, and as such, were improperly received by the court below.
The charge qí the court cannot be supported, because it
These views are sufficient to guide the primary court in the future progress of the cause, and show that the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.