72 Ga. 539 | Ga. | 1884
This was an action in the statutory form to recover the premises in dispute, to which the defendant pleaded the general issue, and further that the deed was executed and delivered by his intestate to secure a debt due from him to the plaintiff; that, upon the payment of the same, the plaintiff obligated himself to reconvey to said intestate; that the said intestate, in his lifetime, had performed his part of the contract by making full payment, but if there was any mistake in this, and any balance remained due, defendant was ready and willing and offered to pay the same, when ascertained; he prayed that an account might be taken of the dealings between the parties, and a judgment rendered awarding to plaintiff what might appear to be due him, and upon his receipt of the same, if anything’ was found due, that the title to the premises might be adjudged to be in the estate of the intestate. .After much testimony of a very conflicting character, the jury found eighty-five dollars due the plaintiff on account of this transaction. Construed by the pleadings in the case, the legal intendment of this verdict was. that the plaintiff should recover this amount, and that, upon the payment of the same, the title to the land should vest in the estate represented by defendant. The plaintiff was dissatisfied with this finding, and moved a new trial upon various grounds, which was overruled by the court.
1. We cannot say that the verdict was contrary to law and evidence, or that it was decidedly and strongly against
2. There were several special grounds upon which it is insisted the new trial should have been ordered. The first we shall notice is that embraced in the sixth and seventh grounds of the motion for a new trial, and amounts to this, that the court committed error in refusing to admit in evidence the testimony of the defendant, and of Mrs. Chester, had on a former trial of this case, and embodied in a brief of evidence agreed to by counsel and approved by the court, which was offered, in the case of the last witness, tq show that she was mistaken in her testimony given on the present trial; and in the first, to impeach and likewise to show that defendant was “mistaken” in his testimony given on the present hearing.
We are not aware that mistakes of witnesses can be corrected in this manner. The testimony of a witness given on another occasion, like his sayings made elsewhere, may be resorted to for the purpose of impeaching him, provided a proper foundation'is first laid for its.admission. This proposition will not be seriously questioned. In a case where the contradictory statements are made in affidavits, or in answers to written interrogatories in the same cause, there is no need of laying the foundation by calling the witness’s attention to them. 7 Ga., 467, 470, 471 ; 14 Id., 186, (10 head-note). In the last case cited, this court said in express terms (p. 195) :, “We adhere to the rule that, in order to impeach a witness, by proof of contradictory statements, the foundation must first be laid by asking him whether or not he has made the declaration intended to be proved. But this does not apply where the
3. The failure of the judge to charge as to the weight to be given to the evidence of witnesses alleged to have been impeached, when his attention has not been called to it, and no request has been made to charge in relation thereto, is not error. This is not one of the material questions in the case, without allusion to which his charge would be necessarily defective. It is only incidental or collateral to such material points, and does not fall within the cases cited from 17 Ga., 444, and 67 Id., 151 ; nor Richardson vs. The State, 70 Ga., 825.
4. A charge that admissions should be scanned with care by the jury, but that, when clearly made out and proved, they were high and strong proof against the party making them, though somewhat inaptly expressed, is substantially correct. Code, §3792. When “deliberately made and precisely identified, they are usually received as satisfactory.” 2 Ga., 30. “Admissions by parties are not to be regarded as an inferior kind of evidence; on the contrary ? when
5. There was no error in admitting testimony as to what disposition the defendant’s intestate said he had made of certain cotton, while it was in his possession and under his control, to the witness, who was endeavoring to obtain it from him in payment of a debt which he held against him. This testimony was admissible, for what it was worth as a disclaimer of title on his part to the property, and an acknowledgment ■ of plaintiff’s right to have it. Code, §3774. It was one link in the chain of the evidence, and if there was a failure to supply the others by showing that the plaintiff got the property, then it went for nought; but this was a matter for. the jury, in connection with the
Tudgment affirmed.