Charles Rossignol and Charles Rossignol, Inc., former manufacturer’s representatives for Prophecy Corporation, sued Prophecy for compensation allegedly due under an employment сontract. Rossignol maintained that after Prophecy terminated its business relationship with him, Prophecy mailed him a check purporting to represent final commissions owed him from which Rossignol claimеd excessive deductions had been made. Prophecy raised the defense of accord and satisfaction in that Rossignol had cashed the check. The dispositive issue before the trial сourt was whether a conversation between Rossignol and the President of Prophecy, in which the two allegedly agreed to further negotiate the deductions, occurred prior to the time Rossignоl cashed the check. The trial court granted summary judgment to Prophecy, finding that Rossignol’s affidavit intentionally contradicted his deposition testimony with respect to this crucial time frame. A majority of the Court of Appeals reversed,
Charles Rossignol, Inc. v. Prophecy Corp.,
We granted certiorari to clarify the circumstances under which the testimony of a respondent to а motion for summary judgment will *28 be construed against him.
1. The rule in Georgia is that the testimony of a party who offers himself as a witness in his own behalf at trial “ ‘is to be construed most strongly against him when it is self-contradictory, vague or equivocal.’ ”
Douglas v. Sumner,
Following the enactment of The Civil Practice Act, the courts were confronted with the analogous situation of construing a party’s self-contradictory testimony on motion for summary judgment. Early on the сourts determined that if on motion for summary judgment a party offered self-contradictory testimony on the dispositive issue in the case, and the more favorable portion of his testimony was the only evidеnce of his right to a verdict in his favor, the trial court must construe the contradictory testimony against him. This being so, the opposing party would be entitled to summary judgment. The courts reasoned that this is the correct result because if the case went to trial under the same evidence, the party offering self-contradictory testimony would have a verdict directed against him.
Dykes v. Hammock,
It is essential to note that this is a rule for construing testimony separate from those rules allocating burdens of proof at trial and on motion for summary judgment. That the rule of summary judgment places on the movant the burden of demonstrаting that there are no genuine issues of fact and that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law while providing that the party opposing the motion is entitled to all favorable inferences from the evidеnce does not suspend the *29 application of this rule for construing testimony to summary judgment proceedings. See Chandler at 522.
Some confusion in this area has resulted from a question certified to this court by the Cоurt of Appeals, and this court’s answer to it in
Burnette Ford, Inc. v. Hayes,
In a number of subsequent cases the Court of Appeals held this court’s ruling in
Burnette Ford
had modified the rule requiring that a party’s self-conflicting testimony be construed against him on motion for summary judgment. These cases interpreted
Burnette Ford
to mean that where there are contradictions in the testimony of a respondent to a motion for summary judgment, the contradiction will not be construed against him; rather, all the evidence, even his own self-contradictory testimony, will be construed in the respondent’s favor. See, e.g.,
Whittle v. Johnston,
In answering the certified question in
Burnette Ford,
this court made reference to
Ryder v. Schreeder,
We conclude therefore that both
Chambers v. C & S,
2. In each case, whether on motion for summary judgment or at trial, it must be decided if the testimony of a party-witness is contradictory. On summаry judgment this is a question for the judge to decide. It is contradictory if one part of the testimony asserts or expresses the opposite of another part of the testimony. 3 To say that testimony is directly contradictory adds nоthing to the statement that it is contradictory. Neither does the issue turn on whether the party-witness’ second statement intentionally contradicts his first. There are situations in which an honest mistake has been made in the first statement; the proper approach is to intentionally contradict the first statement by way of explanation. We point out that even where testimony is contradictory, if a reasonable explanаtion is offered for the contradiction, the testimony will not be construed against the party-witness. The burden rests upon the party giving the contradictory testimony to offer a reasonable explanаtion, and whether this has been done is an issue of law for the trial judge. Ryder v. Schreeder, 224 Ga., supra; Chandler v. Gately, 119 Ga. App., supra. On the other hand, a careless and untruthful witness may have simply forgotten what was said in the first statement, and tailored his second statement to meet the needs of the occasion without regard to the truth. He may have no intent to contradict the first statement, but surely the law will construe this contradiction against him.
3. The dispositive issue in thе case before us is whether the alleged conversation between Rossignol and the President of Prophecy Corporation occurred before or after Rossignol cashed the check in *31 question. Rossignol first testified on deposition that he could not recall whether he had the crucial conversation before or after he cashed the check. He then responded in thе affirmative to a question which asked if he deposited the check prior to the crucial discussion with the President of Prophecy. Elsewhere in his deposition he stated, “There are so many things that wеre compressed in that time period, dates are very, very hard to remember.”
By way of a subsequent affidavit, Rossignol stated, “In my deposition ... I did not know if I had the conversation . . . before or after I deрosited the check in question. Since the deposition I have reviewed my notes and records and have otherwise refreshed my recollection, and I now know I had this conversation before I dеposited the check.”
Applying the rules laid down in Divisions 1 and 2, we hold that the deposition and affidavit are contradictory, but a reasonable explanation of the contradiction is offerеd in the affidavit. Therefore, the Court of Appeals correctly held that since the favorable portion of Rossignol’s testimony is not to be construed against him, a genuine issue of material fact rеmains, and the grant of summary judgment to Prophecy was improper.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
We point out that the case before us deals only with “self-contradictory” testimony, find not with “vague” or “equivocal” testimony. See Douglas u. Sumner, supra.
We refer to the facts as presented to the Court of Appeals on the merits of the case in
Burnette Ford v. Hayes,
Webster’s Third New International Dictionary states that to “contradict” is “to assert the contrary.”
