29 Ga. App. 328 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1922
1. In a suit against the seller, the plaintiff in error, by the purchaser, the defendant in error, for a breach of the contract, in failing to deliver the goods which were sold, a letter to the seller by a third person, offering to countermand an order for goods given by the purchaser, is not admissible as evidence for the purpose of establishing a countermand, in the absence of proof of the authority of the writer from the purchaser.
2. A grant of authority by a purchaser of goods, to a third person, to effectuate an assignment of "the right and interest of such purchaser in
3. A writing by one person is not admissible for the purpose of impeaching another, in the absence of any proof that the writing was in any manner authorized or assented to by the latter.
4. “ While ‘ direct testimony as to market value is in the nature of opinion evidence/ testimony as to the state of the market and as to the actual selling price of a certain commodity at a particular time and place is testimony as to a positive fact and is not in its nature opinion evidence, and, where undisputed, a verdict may properly be directed as to the value thus proved.” Glynn Canning Co. v. Adams Co., 26 Ga. App. 365 (2) (106 S. E. 207).
5. The letters which were offered in evidence by the defendant not being admissible for any purpose, and the evidence which was adduced by the plaintiff having established the contract* the failure to deliver, and the damage as alleged, and the defendant having wholly failed to prove his only defense,— that the plaintiff had countermanded his order,—and having in no wise rebutted any of the evidence of the plaintiff, a verdict for the latter for the principal amount sued for was properly directed.
Judgment affirmed.