34 Ala. 687 | Ala. | 1859
The'faet sought to be established bj' the opinions of the witnesses Huey and Thomason was, that it was more profitable to borrow money and discount on private account than to act as an agent for a bank. The relevancy of this fact is, to say the least of it, open to grave question. To what ("if any) weight it would be entitled, in determining the question whether J. S. Winter & Co. were acting as agents for the bank, or on their individual account, would depend materially on many other facts of which no mention is made in the record. It might require more means and better credit to borrow money from a bank, than-to obtain an agency. Hence, if the person whose relation to the bank was in question, was not in a condition to borrow the money, the fact that dealing with borrowed money on private account was more profitable than an agency, would be entitled to no weight. The motives which control human conduct, differ as widely as the phases of character to be found among men. The greater profitableness of one business might attract one person,while another would prefer a different employment, of which, though the profits might not be so large, the risks would be less. The choice of a profession or occupation is so' much a matter of taste and inclination, and controlled by such
The other questions presented by this record may not arise upon another trial, and we will not consider them.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded.