8 Ga. 178 | Ga. | 1850
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
As to the necessity of request, see Story on Bailm. §§61, 107. Brown vs. Cook, 9 Johns. R. 361. Hofmer vs. Clarke, 2 Greenleaf’s R. 308. 1 Dane’s Abr. ch. 17, art. 1, 2. 2 Black. Com. 452. Pothier’s Traite, de Depot, n. 22. As to the necessity of averring and proving a request, see Com. Dig. Pleader, c. 69. 1 Saunders R. 33, n. 2. 5 B. & Ald. 712. 1 D. & R. 361, S. C. 1 Taunt. 572.
Exception is taken to this charge, as being made in relation to a demand, about which there was no testimony. I have looked carefully into the evidence, and find no testimony whatever in relation to a demand by the plaintiff. This being true, it was error to instruct the Jury to look into the evidence, and if they found the demand proven, to find for the plaintiff and if not, for the defendant. It has been, over and over again, decided by this Court, that it is error to instruct the Jury in reference to a matter of fact, about which there is no evidence. The language qf the Judge is, that if they believed that a demand was made by Elijah Evans, they should find for the plaintiff. This was wrong, in any view of it. If he intended to be understood to instruct them, that if a demand was made by Elijah Evans, as the agent of John Evans, they should find for the plaintiff, he ought to haye so expressed himself; but he does not. From what he does say, the Jury could have believed nothing else, but that he meant, that a demand by Elijah Evans, in his own right, would be sufficient to authorize the plaintiff to recover. If he is to be understood as assuming that the agency of Elijah Evans, in making a demand, was proven, the charge is equally erroneous; because there is not a particle of evidence to prove that agency. The agency of Elijah Evans, in making the deposit, is proven ; but so far from his agency in making a demand being proven, or there being any testimony to prove it, the reverse is true. The
Upon these grounds, let the judgment of the Court below be reversed.