9 Ga. App. 104 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
1. The inference prejudieal to a party to a cause, which may ■ be indulged on account of the absence of a witness whose testimony was accessible to him, but who was not produced, is not dependent upon the fact that the witness is his employee. The fact that an employee
2. The law does not make it the duty of litigants to produce a certain number of witnesses, or all of the witnesses, to a fact at issue; and if a litigant sees proper to rest his case upon one witness, even though others be accessible, he but exercises his right, though if he fails in any case to produce witnesses that are accessible, he subjects himself to the consequences which may result from the jury’s drawing the inference that the witnesses would, if produced, have testified to facts prejudicial to him. The failure to produce witnesses who are accessible to a party will authorize counsel of the opposite party to argue before the jury that, if they be in doubt as to the truth of the transaction, they would be authorized to infer that if the absent witnesses had testified', the testimony would have been prejudicial to the party who might most easily have produced them.
3. There is no merit in the contention that the discretion of the trial judge was not exercised in his order overruling the motion for a new trial. It is manifest, from the verbiage of the order of the court, that the fact, incidentally stated, that there had been two trials of the case, one of which had res'ulted in a mistrial, was merely a circumstance which perhaps had a persuasive bearing upon the court’s mind in reaching a conclusion, or in fortifying a conclusion the court had already reached. While the trial judge must always exercise his full discretion in passing upon motions for new trial, the order of the judge in this ease does not indicate that he was of the opinion that his power to grant a new trial was in any way restricted by the fact that there had been two trials. On the other hand, construing the order as a whole, the statement of the judge appears to be made merely as affording additional reasons confirmatory of his personal judgment approving the verdict.
4. The trial was free from error, the evidence authorized the finding of the jury, the verdict was approved by the trial judge, and there was no error in refusing a new trial. Judgment affirmed.