56 S.E. 863 | N.C. | 1907
The defendant excepted and appealed from the judgment rendered.
This case is reported in
We find no evidence in the record tending to sustain these necessary allegations of fact, and, therefore, hold that the court erred in refusing to give the defendant's prayer for instructions to that effect. The only evidence which, it is argued by plaintiff, tends to support such allegation is that prior to 3 February, 1902, the date of the telegram, the *126 plaintiff had purchased whiskey from Royal on credit. This fact, if true, is a mere collateral circumstance, and tends to prove nothing. The failure to ship the "corn" can be accounted for on a different hypothesis than the failure to get the message correctly delivered under the circumstances of the case, and therefore the evidence is insufficient. 1 Greenleaf Ev., sec. 12; 1 Stark. Ev., 471, note. Assuming that the message had been correctly transmitted, or that Royal was not misled as to the identity of the sender of the message, and may also have (180) understood "corn" to mean "corn whiskey," yet he may not have filled the order for other reasons. He may not have had the article on hand at the time; again, he may personally have neglected and overlooked the order and failed, therefore, to ship; or he may have preferred to have the cash before shipping, or the shipment may have gone astray, etc., etc. The proof tendered does not exclude either of the above hypotheses, and is consistent with all.
New trial.
Cited: Gardner v. Tel. Co.,