Waller v. Simpson

94 So. 343 | Ala. | 1922

The declaration or admissions of parties to a civil cause against interest are admissible against them whether made in or out of court, and the trial court erred in not permitting the witness Hill to testify as to the evidence or statement of Albert McFarland upon the former trial of this cause in the justice court in reference to the transaction between the plaintiff and said McFarland as to the plans and specifications for the house, as this evidence tended to establish a contract between the parties and the establishment of the plaintiff's cause of action. Hill was in no sense interested in the result so as to preclude him from testifying on account of the subsequent death of McFarland, and we know of no rule of law forbidding the establishment of a contract by the declarations or admissions of the parties thereto. Apart from this error, the plaintiff was entitled to the general charge with hypothesis, had it been requested; for, if the jury believed Richardson's evidence, which was in no sense disputed, the plaintiff made out a case, the only question left open being the amount agreed to be paid for the plan for the house; the witness Richardson not being positive as to the amount to be paid, whether $75, $80, or $85. The plaintiff, however, sought to prove by the witness Hill that McFarland admitted that the price to be paid was $85.

The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

McCLELLAN, SOMERVILLE, and THOMAS, JJ., concur.