Appellee brought suit against appellants in a two-count complaint. Count I alleged a conspiracy tо destroy appellee’s business. Count II alleged a claim for malicious prosecution on a “bad cheсk” charge. The case was tried before a jury and, at the close of the evidence, appellee “withdrew” Count I so that the case was submitted to the jury only as to the malicious prosecution claim. The jury returned a vеrdict for appellee. Appellants appeal from the denial of their motion for new trial.
1. During the trial, appellee caused a portion of an affidavit of one of the appellants to be read intо evidence. The affidavit had originally been offered in support of appellants’ unsuccessful motion for summary judgment. At trial, appellee asserted that a portion of the affidavit constituted an admission by the appеllant and, on that basis, the trial court permitted the affidavit to be read to the jury and admitted into evidence. On appeal appellants do not assert that the statement in the affidavit was not an admission, nor do they contеnd that it should not have been read to the jury. What they do argue is that the trial court erred in admitting the affidavit itself into evidence and in further allowing the document to go out with the jury.
Recent appellate decisions have apparently had the unfortunate
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result of blurring the distinction between the issue of the underlying admissibility of certain written evidence and the question of allowing that evidence to go out with the jury. See generally
Thomason v. Genuine Parts Co.,
It is clear, however, that the underlying “admissibility” of written evidence in a case is a separate and distinct issue from whether that evidence should be allowed to go out with the jury. “ ‘Appellant’s continuing objection against admission of this evidence did not reach the question of its going out with the jury . . . [Cits.]’ [Cit.]”
Gribble v. State,
In the instant case it appears that, in the trial court, appellants asserted only objections to the genеral admissibility of the affidavit into evidence. Assuming the appellant’s affidavit to be, in its relevant part, an “admission” — and no argument is made on appeal that it is not — it was “admissible” into evidence as such. See generally Code Ann. § 38-403. Further аssuming that the affidavit was not however proper evidence for the jury to have in its possession during deliberations, the transcript demonstrates that appellants raised no such specific objection in the trial court. “An enumeration of error complaining of admission of evidence or of documents going out with the jury presents nothing for decision by this court where no objection was made at the trial. [Cits.]”
White v. State,
2. Appellants enumerate as error the admission of certain testimony concerning their business dealings with an individual other than appellee. It is urged that this evidence was inadmissible because “in controversies between two persons regarding a given subject-matter, evidence as to what occurred between one of them and a third person with reference to a similar, though entirely distinct transaction is irrelevant. [Cits.]”
Kamensky v. Sou. Oxygen Supply Co.,
The
Kamensky
decision states the gеneral rule as to the inadmissibility of similar but distinct transactions. There is, however, an exception. “The conduct of parties in other transactions is irrelevant, ‘unless the nature of the action involves such character and renders necessary or proper the investigation of such conduct.’ Code § 38-202.”
Pinkerton Nat. Detective Agency v. Stevens,
3. Appellants enumerate аs error allowing the complaint containing the withdrawn allegations of Count I to go out with the jury. It is urged that allowing the jury to hаve the complaint without excising the “prejudicial” allegations of Count I was erroneous.
“[T]he jury was [in effect] instruсted that the pleadings were ‘just the contentions of the parties and they are not evidence in this case.’ [Cit.] ”
B. G. Sanders & Assoc. v. Castellow,
Judgment affirmed.
