111 Ga. 239 | Ga. | 1900
The plaintiff in error, C. J. Simmons, became indebted to P. J, McNamara, as administrator of the estate of M. Lynch, deceased, for money which Simmons had collected as an attorney and which McNamara permitted him to retain as a loan. McNamara died, and E. PI. Thornton became administrator de bonis non of Lynch’s estate. As such he brought an action against Simmons for the money above mentioned, and “ upon the trial of said case the defendant admitted the plaintiff’s account in evidence without proof, assuming the burden of showing that the debt had been paid off.” For the purpose of so doing, Simmons tendered in evidence several checks drawn by himself on the Exchange Bank of Atlanta, “payable to the order of P. J. McNamara.” Each of these checks was indorsed: “P. J. McNamara, M. Lynch Estate by P. J. McNamara, administrator,” and on each was a stamp showing that it had been paid by the bank. The plaintiff objected to the admission of these checks, on the ground that they did not show that they were to be applied as payments on the alleged debt of the plaintiff; the court sustained the objection, excluded the checks from evidence, and directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, no proof being offered by the defendant “connecting these checks 'with the plaintiff’s debt.” The only error of which the bill of exceptions complains is the action of the court in not permitting the checks to be introduced in evidence.
The position of the plaintiff in error is that these checks, without more, afforded prima facie evidence of payments by
Judgment affirmed.