An instrument, reciting a consideration of $10 and other good and valuable considerations, purporting to convey lands to the maker’s nephews and nieces, with the usual habendum and warranty clauses and provisions of a deed, purporting to be signed by the maker by “his x mark,” attested by two witnesses, one a notary public, delivered to one of the grantees at the time of its execution, and recorded during the life of the grantor, is a deed, and not a void will because improperly witnessed as such, where, after conveying the property to the grantees, their heirs and assigns, it provides: “The said grantor hereby expressly reserves in and for himself a life estate in and to the above-described property, with all rights and appurtenances thereof, and this conveyance is to be inoperative until the death of the grantor.” In such a case, the question is one as to the “intention of the parties as gathered from the form and language of the instrument, considered in the light of all the circumstances and the contemporaneous acts of the parties.”
Brice
v.
Sheffield,
118
Ga.
128, 131 (
Under the preceding rules, the court properly granted a nonsuit on the petition by the executor of the subsequently exеcuted will of the maker, seeking to cancel the previous instrument on the contention made in the second count that the instrument was a void will because there were only two witnesses.
(а) Nor did the court err in granting such nonsuit, under the amendment to the second count setting up that the instrument, if trеated as a deed, was without consideration, was never delivered to any grantee, had been obtained by fraud, and that no revenue stamps were attached “by the grantor, in his presence or by his authority,” since the evidence as to the first three qúestions was undisputed and in favоr of the grantees; and since, as to the revenue stamps, the undisputed subsequent affixing of the stamps by one of the grantees was proper and did not constitute an illegal alteration of the instrument. 3 C. J. S. 960 (§ 44-b), and cit.
(б) The fact that the court overruled the defendants’ demurrer to the secоnd count of the petition as thus amended, setting up that the instrument, if construed as a deed, was never delivered, lacked consideration, was obtained by fraud, and had no revenue stamps attached when executed, did not and could .not constitute res judicata, so as to estаblish as the law of the case that the executor was entitled to prevail on the other contention that the instrument was a will.
Under the evidence, as set forth in the statement of facts, it can not be said that a verdict was demanded for either of the contending parties; and the court did not err, on the general grounds, in refusing a new trial.
The Code, § 38-1806, provides: “When a witness shall be successfully contradicted as to a material matter, his credit as to other matters shall be for the jury, but if a witness shall swear wilfully and knowingly falsely, his testimony* shall be disregarded entirely, unless corrobоrated by circumstances or other unim
*418
peached evidence. The credit to be given his testimony where impeached for general bad character or for contradictory statements out of court shall be for the jury to determine." Under this rule as to wilful and knowing falsity in a material matter, it has several times been held, that if a witness swears at the trial to a certain state of facts in a material matter, and he has previously sworn to the contrary in the same case, and where he admits that his testimony was false, this constitutes a wilful and knowing false swearing, and rеquires the jury to reject his testimony entirely, unless it be “corroborated by circumstances or other unimpeached evidence." In such a case it has been held that the judge should so charge the jury, even without a request.
Stafford
v.
State, 55 Ga.
591 (4), 597;
Plummer
v. State, 111
Ga.
839 (
(a) Exception is taken to the failure to charge the principle in the Code, § 38-1806, as to intentionally false testimony, not only under the rule just dealt with, but for the additional and different reason, that, thе judge having charged the jury on the general subject of impeachment, and having failed to charge the particular rule in this section, the charge which he did give was incomplete and for that reason erroneous. In
Millen & Southwestern R. Co.
v.
Allen,
130
Ga.
656 (5), 660 (
It is often true, as has been said by the Court of Appeals, that an incomplete statement may amount to an inaccurate statement.
Rumph
v.
State,
supra;
Harper
v.
State,
17
Ga. App.
561 (3) (87
*420
S. E. 808);
Williams
v.
State,
25
Ga. App.
193 (
It was not error to fail to charge, together with the instructions on impeachment, the particular rule that the testimony of a party is to be construed most strongly against him, and that he is not entitled to recover without “other evidence tending to establish his right tо recover.” Not only was there no request so to charge, but there were other witnesses, besides the defendant grantees, whose testimony supported their contentions. Accordingly, the principle as to the right of such a party to prevail, the omission of which is exceрted to, would not have been a proper instruction.
Ray v. Green,
113
Ga.
920 (2) (
(a)
Under adjudications by this court and the Court of Appeals, no ground for reversal is shown by the use of the word
“absolutely”
in the instructions on impeachment, where, among other rules, the judge charged: “When a witness has been successfully impeaсhed by any of the legal methods, that is, where his unworthiness of credit is
absolutely
established in the minds of the jury, he ought not to be believed, and it is the duty of the jury to disregard his entire testimony, unless it is corroborated, in which case you may believe the witness, it being, as a matter of course, always for the jury to determinе whether or not a witness has or has not been in fact so impeached.”
Elliot
v.
State,
138
Ga.
23 (2), 25 (
*421
(6) In the instructions on impeachment the- judge charged as follows: “A witness may he impeached by disproving the facts testified to by him, by proof of contradictory statements previously made by him of matters relevant to his testimony in the case, or by proof of general bad character. When thus impeached, or sought to be,
in either, of the latter instances,
he may be sustained by proof of general good character, the effect of the evidence to be determined by the jury.” The exception to this instruction is that under the italicized language, “the latter instances,” the jury might have confused the instruction as meaning that a witness could be sustained by proof of good character, not only in the latter two instances mentioned by the court, but also in the instance previously mentioned, where the witnеss had been impeached by “disproving the facts testified to by him;” and that good character would not sustain a witness thus impeached. Without regard to the merits of this legal contention under the facts of the case (see
Surles
v.
State,
148
Ga.
538 (6),
(c) “Where a judge undertakes to state to the jury the рrinciples of the Code, § 38-107, as to how the preponderance of evidence should be determined, it is his duty to instruct the jury fully and completely with respect thereto, so far as relevant to the case on trial, and omission to do so is erroneous.”
Renfroe
v. Hamil
ton,
193
Ga.
194 (2), 197 (
In the oral examination of Solomon George, one of the grantees in the deed involved, he testified аt the trial: “During the time [Habib George, the grantor] got ready to leave [Valdosta], he told me what he wanted me to do; he wanted me to fix a deed; he didn’t want any one to have more than the others; all he wanted to do was to collect the rent and have the rent and live out оf it until he died; he wanted the deed'fixed that way, which I did.” The executor objected to what the grantor had said, on the grounds that such a conversation was “hearsay,” was “a communication with a dead man,” and had “nothing to do with this case.” The exception to the overruling of the objеction is that “said testimony of Solomon George, who was a party defendant to the ease, related to a conversation and transaction with Habib George, deceased, and was inadmissible in a case instituted by [his] personal representative.” Whether or not the form of the objection, as made,- to the admissibility of the testimony, rather than to the competency of the witness, was sufficient to raise the question sought to be raised by the exception (see
Crozier
v.
Goldman,
153
Ga.
162, 163, 164,
Judgment affirmed.
