113 Ga. 424 | Ga. | 1901
Gray instituted his action against the Phoenix Insurance Company, seeking to recover a judgment under a fire policy, which covered a building and certain furniture, to the amount of $1,525; and a verdict was rendered in his favor. The company made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and it excepted.
Mr. Justice Lewis in the case of the Raleigh & Gaston R. Co. v. Allen, 106 Ga. 572, very aptly said, in the opinion which he delivered in that case: “ The ruling of the court that all admissions should be scanned with care is authorized by section 5197 of the Civil Code. But there is nothing in this section of the code, nor in any other statute of the State, which declares that when an admission is established to the satisfaction of the .jury it constitutes a high degree of evidence and the jury should give it great weight. It may be sound philosophy, founded upon human experience and a knowledge of human character, that an admission, made voluntarily by a party against his own interest, constitutes very strong evidence of the fact admitted. It is often the case that learned writers of law-books, and even courts, in the discussion of principles involving the weight of testimony and the credibility of witnesses, advance ideas, sound in themselves, which are not intended to be declared as positive law, but as a safe rule to guide mankind generally in reaching conclusions upon stated facts; but it does not follow from this that, however sound the philosophy of such rules
The question whether the charge requested should have been given is an important one. Inasmuch as many prior decisions of this court have been cited to sustain the soundness of the propositions which it contains, we deem the determination of the question of sufficient importance to refer to the previous adjudications of this court made on the subject. In the case of Solomon v. Solomon, 2 Ga. 30, a charge in regard to verbal admissions was given to the jury in the following language: “ They ought to be received with great caution, and if made by a party when ignorant of his rights, are not binding upon him; yet, when made deliberately, and precisely identified, are usually received as satisfactory.” Warner, J.,
• After a consideration of the other grounds of the motion for a new trial, it is our opinion that the court did not err in refusing to order a new trial for any of the reasons assigned in them.
Judgment affirmed.