By the Court —
delivering the opinion.
The first ground of error assigned to the judgment of the Court below is, in sustaining the plaintiff’s objection to the citizens of Columbus being competent Jurors for the trial of the. cause, inasmuch as they were liable to be taxed for the payment
The testimony of Moses, the former Mayor of the City, was offered by the plaintiff for the purpose of showing that the negro Crawford, was confined by the order of the defendants. The witness stated that “ in regard to the plaintiff’s calls upon him relative to Crawford, he recollects distinctly, that nothing on the-subject would have been listened to, except through the action of the defendants.” To the admission of this part of the testimony of the witness, the defendants excepted. To enable the plaintiff to recover, it was necessary for him to show that the slave, Crawford, was confined by the orders of the defendants, and the testimony of Moses, who was Mayor of the City at that time, and which is excepted tw, when taken in connexion with the other part of his answers, as appear on the record, manifestly conduces to prove the fact of the detention of the negro by the defendants,, and was properly admitted by the Court below.
This motion is supported by the affidavit of Jones, which does not establish any settled opinion entertained or expressed by the Juror against the defendants, but all improper inferences
Let the judgment of the Court below be affirmed.
See Monroe vs. The State, 5 Ga. Rep. 85. — [Rep.]