73 Ga. 455 | Ga. | 1884
The defendant excepted to the judgment of the court in overruling and refusing the motion for new trial.
But it is contended that the rejection of this evidence did not hurt the plaintiff in error, because the jury, by their verdict, found that defendant in error was of unsound mind when his father’s will was made, and that the testimony could only relate to the condition of defendant’s mind at that time, and not at the time of the trial. — this testimony having been taken by commission some ten years before the trial. We cannot say what effect this evidence might have had upon the jury, if it had been admitted. Kennedy had been a partner of the father of young Gray, and knew him well and intimately; Gray, the other witness, was his uncle, and had known him all his life, and both testified as to the permanent character of the unsoundness of the mind of E. T. Gray, the defendant in error.
Judgment reversed.