62 So. 975 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1913
The object of this suit was to charge the appellant with liability for the value of 50 boxes of tobacco, received by it as a common carrier to he delivered to the appellee at Gadsden for a' reward, and which the complaint alleged it failed to deliver. One Daniels, a Avitness for the defendant (appellant here), testified that he was the defendant’s ship
In the opinion rendered in the case of Acklen’s Executor v. Hickman, 63 Ala. 494, 35 Am. Rep. 54, Stone, J., in speaking of the use of memoranda in connection with the testimony of a witness, said: “In the second class are embraced cases in which the witness, after examining the memorandum, cannot testify to an existing knowledge of the fact, independent of the memorandum.
But it is argued by the counsel for the appellee that the requirement of a showing that when the memorandum was made the fact which it recorded was a matter within the knowledge of the person making it is one for the protection of the party against whom the memorandum.is .proposed to be proved, and that, if it is admitted
Another argument advanced is that the appellant could not have been prejudiced by the rulings complained of, because the testimony of the witness on cross-examination disclosed that he had never had knowledge of the facts, the existence of which was indicated by the receipt or memorandum which had been admitted in evidence. It is claimed that this is a necessary conclusion from the statements made by the • witness on his cross-examination as to his inability to recall any particular delivery made from the mass of freight — often several car loads — received each day, or to state that the tobacco in question was in the space in the depot ware-room, in which freight for the appellee was placed for delivery. These statements of the witness disclose his failure at the time he was giving his testimony to remember the things mentioned, but by no means indicate .that at the time inquired about he was without personal knowledge of anything of which the memorandum, to Avhich he referred was a record. The plain purpose of the questions asked him on his examination in rebuttal was to show affirmatively that at that former time he
Reversed and remanded.