Adams v. Eatherly Hardware Co.
This text of 3 S.E. 430 (Adams v. Eatherly Hardware Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The question in this case was, whether certain goods had been sold by the Eatherly Hardware Company to C. L. Laney individually, or to O. L. Laney & Co. Upon the trial of the case, Eatherly and another member of the firm (the Eatherly Hardware Company), over objection of [489]*489the defendant, were allowed to testify that these goods had been sold to Laney, and how it came that they treated with Laney individually and not with Laney & Co. Laney being dead, it was objected that this testimony was inadmissible. The court overruled that objection and allowed the testimony.
We think the court was wrong. Under the act of 1866, Laney being dead, these parties -were incompetent witnesses. They were incompetent at common law, and could only be competent under the statute; yet by the provisions of the act of 1866, which prescribes that where one of the original parties to the contract or cause of action is dead, the other party shall not be permitted to testify, the law is left just where it stood before the passage of the act. For this reason, we think that the court erred. Furthermore, we think the testimony itself was inadmissible. They testified as to what took place in their own minds; to conclusions they had arrived at. Their impressions were allowed to go to the jury. This was improper testimony.
We think the court below erred in refusing to grant a new trial; and the judgment is reversed.
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3 S.E. 430, 78 Ga. 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-eatherly-hardware-co-ga-1887.