Becker v. Donalson

67 S.E. 92, 133 Ga. 864, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 84
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 16, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 67 S.E. 92 (Becker v. Donalson) 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.

Bluebook
Becker v. Donalson, 67 S.E. 92, 133 Ga. 864, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 84 (Ga. 1910).

Opinion

Atkinson, J.

1. One ground of the motion for new trial complains of error in allowing a witness to testify that ”the $1250.00 which was paid for this land was credited on the ledger of the Donalson Lumber Company kept by B. A. Becker. Mr. B. A. Becker made the entries; it is in his handwriting.” The same ground complains of error in admitting in evidence the entry referred to by the witness, which appeared “on the ledger No. 3, page 590, the substance and effect of which was to credit Ed. C. Becker in the year 1897 by the purchase of 625 acres of land, July 6th, 1894, $1250.75.” The objection urged to the admission of the evidence was, “that it sought to bind and affect the rights of E. O. Becker by an entry made on the books by B. A. Becker, of which entry E. C. Becker had no knowledge or notice, . . whereas said evidence is wholly irrelevant as relating to transactions be[866]*866tween B. A. Becker and his principal, the Donalson Lumber Company, and not to a transaction in which the said E. C. Becker was concerned or by which the said E. C. Becker was affected, the only evidence introduced in said case in reference to any agency of E. C. Becker being the evidence of John E. Donalson, a witness for the plaintiff, to the effect that Mr. Becker was in Georgia looking after his father’s interests and acting in the capacity as secretary and treasurer of the Donalson Lumber Company, and that B. A. Becker represented E. C. Becker, and that E. C. Becker had told John E. Donalson that B. A. Becker would look after E.' C. Becker’s interests down here; and the evidence of E. C. Becker to the effect that B. A. Becker was a local representative of his (B. A. Becker’s) and E. C. Becker’s interests in the Donalson Lumber Company, and that Mr. E. C. Becker expressly told John E. Donalson and also wrote him that B. A. Becker would represent their interests in all matters pertaining to that, and always gave express power in delegating authority.” The objection was also urged, that “said entry on said books was and purported to be copied from ledger two, page 187, and was not and did not purport to be a book of original entries, and said entry was not admissible without producing or accounting for said ledger No. 2 from which the same was copied, and that said ledger No. 2 was not produced and not accounted for.” The objection to the evidence, in so far as it affected E. C. Becker, was well founded, but B. A. Becker was a party defendant and claimed the land as a purchaser from E. C. Becker by purchase made subsequently to the time it was contended by plaintiffs that the Donalson Lumber Company had made its contract with E. C. Becker for the purchase of the same land. As it was affirmatively shown that the entry complained of was in the handwriting of B. A. Becker, it was admissible as against him, at least as a circumstance tending to show that he had notice of the alleged contract between E. C. Becker and the Donalson Lumber Company. Being admissible for that purpose, and the writing being the original writing of B. A. Becker, the fact that the entry was found in a ledger rather than in an ordinary day-book or other book of original entries became immaterial, and would be no cause for the grant of a new trial. As to B. A. Becker the entry was original. The evidence would not be rendered entirely inadmissible merely because it did not bind E. C. Becker.

[867]*8672. In another ground of the motion for new trial complaint is made of the ruling of the court in allowing a witness to testify, “when he [B. A. Becker] returned home he offered to sell out the •entire interests, saying that his father had directed him to do it;— ■offered to sell their entire interests for $25,000.00.” The objection urged to the admissibility of this evidence was, “that it was mere Bearsay testimony as to what E. C. Becker had directed B. A. Eecker to do,” and “by said evidence it was sought to bind E. C. Becker and establish an agency on the part of B. A. Becker for E. C. Becker by mere declarations of B. A. Becker.” It was insisted, in reply to the objections urged, that the agency of B. A. Becker was fully established by other evidence, and that there was no attempt by the testimony introduced to prove agency by the sayings of the agent. We do not think this answer sufficient to meet the objection. The evidence taken altogether was not sufficient to show that E. C. Becker had authorized B. A. Becker to sell out his entire interests in the business. To sell out the business was quite different from representing E. C. Becker’s interests in the business generally at the place where it was conducted. The evidence recited in the ground of the motion for new trial dealt with in the first division of this opinion is substantially all of the evidence tending to show agency on the part of B. A. Becker, except in the particular instance where a special power of attorney was executed, authorizing B. A. Becker to settle certain mortgages, etc., which did not purport to contemplate such authority as that contained in the evidence to which objection was made. The evidence referred to in the first division of this opinion, tending to show agency on the part of B. A. Becker, contemplated power to represent the interests of E. C. Becker in a continuing business rather than power to make disposition of the business. That agency can not be proved by the sayings of an agent, see Franklin County Lumber Company v. Grady County, 133 Ga. 557 (66 S. E. 264), and cit.

3. The 7th and 8th grounds of the amended motion for new trial complain of the ruling of the court in regard to the admissibility of certain testimony. When objection was made to it, the judge announced that he would admit it “for the present.” There was no further motion made to exclude it, nor was any further ruling otherwise invoked as to its admissibility. A new trial will be granted on other grounds, and the questions presented will not [868]*868likely arise again. We do not think it necessary to deal with these two grounds further than to make reference to the practice of admitting testimony “for the present” when objection is offered to its admissibility'. Where, as in this case, the objection makes a direct question of the admissibility or inadmissibility of the testimony, and there is no question connecting it with other testimony or the like, the better practice is to rule directly on the question and not to admit it “for the present.” This case differs from Cawthon v. State, 119 Ga. 396 (46 S. E. 897), where the testimony objected to was to be connected with the testimony of another witness to be examined.

4. Another ground of the motion for new trial was, because the court erred in refusing to allow movant’s counsel to ask certain questions, and in refusing to allow the witness to answer them. The witness was one of the plaintiffs, testifying in his own behalf,, and was under cross-examination. He had testified, that the land in controversy was the property of the Donalson Lumber Company, but it had never gotten a deed for it; that the title thereto was held by E. C. Becker as security for the money which he had furnished with which to buy it; and that witness had written to E. C. Becker, asking him to make a deed after a certain trade with Williams. After delivery of the testimony to this effect, movant’s counsel asked the witness, “Why did you not get a deed then [at the time of the transfer from E. C. Becker to W. T. Williams] and have the deed [to E. C.

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Bluebook (online)
67 S.E. 92, 133 Ga. 864, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/becker-v-donalson-ga-1910.