88 Ga. 468 | Ga. | 1892
Judgment affirmed.
Callahan sued Pool for $65 balance claimed to be due on a house building contract, and obtained a verdict for that amount. A new trial was denied, and Pool excepted. The grounds for new trial were, that the verdict was contrary to law and evidence; that W. W. Bradley, one of the jurors that tried the case, was not in the jury-box nor on the jury-list; and that the name of another of the jurors, M. V. Cook, did not appear upon the tax-books or list for taxes. The facts stated as to the jurors were unknown to Pool or his counsel until after the trial, as appears by their affidavits. The record also, contains the affidavit of W. W. Bradley, in which he says that he was one of the jurors who tried the case, that he is sometimes known as W. W. Bradley and sometimes as W. M. Bradley, that he sometimes signs his name one way and sometimes the other, that he is the W. M. Bradley whose name is on the jury-list, that there is no other W. M. Bradley on said jury-list or in the county in his certain knowledge, and that he has been a citizen and tax-payer of the county for five or six years.
By the contract sued on, dated March 4, 1890, Callahan agreed to rebuild and finish all wood work and brick work of a house according to. specifications and sketch ; and Pool agreed to pay him $300 in installments as the work progressed, twenty per cent, of that amount to be
Testimony for the defendant: The house has not yet been finished according to the contract. The job was very poor work, was unskillfully and carelessly done in many respects ; none of it was done properly, except the shingling of the roof. There were defects in the brick work in not putting in two brick pillars under one of the sleepers of the' house whére it was unsupported by the chimneys, which plaintiff refused to put-in, and defendant placed them at an expense of $1.50. The chimneys, instead of being 4 feet wide, were made wider, thereby making a misfit for the mantles. The brick pillars under the front veranda were not uniformly located and did not make a neat job. The window-frames were not put in line with each other, some higher and some lower, and not equal distance from the door or center of house in the rear side. The veranda posts in front were irregularly placed, no two of them being the same distance apart. Defendant exhibited to the jury impressions he-had taken in wax of about sixteen cracks in different parts of the house. They were from over one inch to one eighth of an inch in size. There was a crack next t,o a door-frame one and one eighth inches wide, and another four fifths of an inch wide. There were three or four cracks over the water-tables one half inch widé,-above window frames on the outside;