39 S.C. 441 | S.C. | 1893
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The present case, however, differs materially from the case referred to in some of its features. Here the defendant, in his answer, set up by way of defence that, by the express terms of the contract upon which the plaintiffs based their action, he was under no obligation to pay to the plaintiffs anything for the work which they had done until he had received pay-
Upon this point, there was a conflict of testimony; and when one Adams was offered as a witness to prove that he heard one Colton, the alleged agent of Dickinson, say that he had heard, through letters from Dickinson, what is quoted above, Iris testimony was objected to, upon two grounds, as we understand it: 1st. Because the letters referred to were the highest evidence. 2d. The declarations of Colton, as to what he had learned from Dickinson, were mere hearsay, and were, therefore, incompetent. The objection was overruled, and this ruling is made the basis of the third ground of appeal. When the testimony of Adams as to what he had heard from Colton was first offered, counsel for defendant objected, unless there was further proof of agency. Testimony was then offered to show that Dickinson resided in New York, and that Colton was his general agent, residing on the line of the railroad under construction in North Carolina; that he made the contracts with defendant’s sub-contractors, signed the checks by which they were paid, and had full" control and management of the work from Rutherford to Marion, in North Carolina. After hearing this testimony, the Circuit Judge ruled the question competent.
Thereupon the witness Adams proceeded to state that he had information from Col. Dickinson that the money — when an
We see no error of law in these observations to the jury. Section 200 of Greenleaf does not purport to lay down any definite rule of law upon the subject under consideration, but at most suggests that verbal admissions should be received with' great caution, for the reasons there indicated, which the judge expressly stated constituted a very strong argument. He did not advise or instruct the jury to disregard the caution there suggested, but, on the contrary, simply instructed the jury that, after all, it was for them to determine the question according to the way in which it affected their own minds, as they were solely responsible for such determination. This was precisely in accord with what was said in Com. v. Galligan, 113 Mass., 202, cited in a note to section 200 of Greenleaf on Evidence — that the value or weight of the testimony “is wholly a matter for the jury.”
By reason of the error suggested in the third ground of appeal, there must be a new trial.
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and that the case be remanded to that court for a new trial.