97 Ga. 241 | Ga. | 1895
1. The action being upon a check given by the defendants to the plaintiff as a partial payment, on account, for various lots of cotton sold by the latter to the former, and the defense in part being that the plaintiff had damaged the defendants by a failure to deliver according to its contract certain portions of these several lots of cotton, it was error to charge: “Certain checks have been introduced in evidence by defendants, showing payments on these cottons. It is the duty of defendants to show which special checks were paid on each lot of cotton. The defendants must go further and show which identical check was paid on each identical lot. If the defendants have failed to do this, then there should be a verdict for plaintiff.”
2. A witness may refresh his memory by examining a book kept by another, the entries on which were made from memoranda furnished by the witness himself, and who had verified the correctness of these entries by comparing the same with his original memoranda. It was, in effect, the same as if the book had been kept by the witness himself.
2. There was no error in refusing to allow a witness, who had “refreshed his memory” by examining a book kept by another and with the keeping of which he had never had anything to do, to testify to the contents of the book, he being unable to recall the figures or entries therein “without depending on the books.” See Hematite Mining Co. v. East Tenn., Va. & Ga. Ry. Co., 92 Ga. 269, 271.
4. Profits which the purchaser of cotton would have made on a contract for the sale thereof to a third person, if the party who had sold and contracted to deliver the cotton to such purchaser' had duly performed his contract, are not recoverable by such purchaser from that party, unless the latter had notice of, and contracted with reference to, such resale by his vendee; certainly not, unless notice thereof was brought home to such party before he made a breach of his own contract. Sanderlin v. Willis, 94 Ga. 171. Judgment reversed.