25 Ga. 576 | Ga. | 1858
By His Court.
delivering the opinion.
Most of the grounds taken in the rnqtion for a new trial* are abandoned in this Court, by the plaintiff in error. We shall, therefore, refer to those only on which we place our reversal of the judgment in the Court below.
The plaintiff must make out his case to the satisfaction of the jury. He must not leave it doubtful, cither from the circumstances which surround it, or from the character of his witnesses. Long vs. Hitchcock, 9 Car. & Payne 619. There was no positive evidence in the case, in legat'd to the commencement of the disease, or the existence of it at the timo of the warranty. It depended on circumstances testified to, and some of these circumstances were conclusions of fact drawn by Medical gentlemen of skill and science in the\r profession, from certain indications of disease found on a post mortem, examination of the diseased negro. Other Medical gentlemen of like skill and science, testified of their knowledge of the negro while in life, and from that knowledge, drew conclusions of fact., directly the reverse of those testified to by the physicians who made the/tost mortem examination. These facts and all other matters in proof, ought to have been well weighed and considered by the jury, and according to the weight of the evidence they should have found their verdict. We think that the charge to the jury that “ whichever way they believed the weight of probability to "be, they were authorized to find,” is not sustained by the law, and was calculated to mislead the ju«y. Under this ¡charge, the jury might' have collected, on each side, every circumstance which they considered as giving rise to a probability, and putting them in opposite scales, there might have been a slight preponderance in favor of the plaintiff, but not sufficient to satisfy them that he was entitled to a verdict; and yet under the charge “that according to fte weight of probability, they were authorized to find a
The witness Philips testified, that the negro was carried to the place where he had Dorsey’s other negroes, about the 2.7th November, 1S55, and she rati away in December, and was gone for several days, when it was quite cold. She was well treated. She never complained once, from the time she was carried to the place, and was in unusually good spirits about bed time of the night she died. Dr. Boon testified, that perl
For the defendant, it was proven by Ur. Green that he isa practicing physician, that he had possession of the negro for two mouths immediately preceding the sale. She left his house on the day of the sale. Site was constantly employ-1 ed, when he had her, in cooking, washing, cleaning up the house, &c. She was never sick a day, and never complained for a moment that he ever heard of, and had all the appearance of a perfectly healthy rngro. He gave it as his opinion, that it was impossible she could have been afflicted with the disease evidenced by the condition of the chest, described by Urs. Boon & Hammond, while she was in his employment, because he was satisfied that she could not have done the work she did, if she had béen thus diseased, without exhibiting marked and distressing symptoms of its presence. The symptoms of the disease he described as Dr. Boon, saying that they always attend it, and that any kind of active labor or severe exercise, is sure to develop© them. He said further, that the disease as described by them, might come on in a month or even in less time, and particularly, if the patient had been much exposed to cold.
Dr. Parker testified, that the negro was with him for five or six months immediately preceding the time she was witbt
This was the evidence of the defendant on the same issue; and giving full effect to the professional opinions of the physicians examined by him, the disease could not have existed at the time of the sale, and the verdict of the jury could not on that evideuce alone be sustained.
Each parly was entitled to a vcidict (hen, according to the testimony submitted by himself exclusively. But in aniving at a conclusion, the evidence must be collated. Dr. Iiammond, the record says, substantially supported the evidence of Dr. Boon, and he must therefore be taken to have described the symptoms of the disease as he did. There is nothing in the record before us to show that the witnesses testifying in the cause are not all entitled to equal credit. We will refer to the testimony. According to Dr. Boon’s evidence,'the general rule is that pericordial dropsy is attended with symptoms before it results in death. But he says, is is possible for it to exist without its evidencing its presence by symptoms. Its existence without symptoms is an exceptional case, then, as such case is possible and not usual. The
If, with labor and exercise, the disease would always be developed, and without them, it might not, the inference would be, that it had its origin after her habits of labor and exercise had ceased. In respect to the abstract professional opinions of tito witnesses, whicli I shall not attempt to reconcile, I will remark that, if they be irreconcileable, they balance eaclt other, as the witnesses are equal in number, and nothing appears in the record to entitle the witnesses of one party to more credit than the other.
Judgment reversed.