Bryan v. Gurr
This text of 27 Ga. 378 (Bryan v. Gurr) 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
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
For myself, I find no great fault with the special plea and the charge asked on it. It might have been better worded perhaps,so as to have set forth truly the facts on which the defendant relies. Admitting the speaking of the words, which is not denied, the defendant should have set forth in his plea, that being present in Court, when the plaintiff was examined as a witness in the case of-----he understood him to say, as did Bailey, Humphries, Giles, Hall, and others, that he, the defendant, had requested him, witness, to tell Fuller to move off of his land. And so understanding him, and knowing that he had given no such instructions, he said to by-standers at the time, and to Gurr himself afterwards, that he had sworn falsely. That he did not speak the words maliciously, but to repel what he believed at the time to be a false statement, highly injurious to himself and prejudicial to his rights, and that he had not repeated the accusation, after its denial by the plaintiff. Of the truth of all which he put himself upon the country, &c
As to the truisms contained in several of the requests to charge, we deem it unnecessery to notice them. They had no special application to the facts of this case.
By this unexpected and uncalled for charge, the Court de[382]*382prived the defendant of thegwhole benefit of his defence. We are not called on to decide whether the charge was right or wrong. The plea of justification had been attempted to be put in, confessing the speaking of the words charged in the declaration, and alleging their truth. It was not objected to. It was treated as a good plea. The Court could not be justified in hearing evidence as to the plaintiff’s general character upon any other ground. Then at the close of the case, without solicitation from plaintiff’s counsel, to have given this charge, was manifest error. The dilemma is palpable. This instruction was wrong, else the Judge was in error in admitting the evidence of Edgeworth, IMcGehee, Tolien, Miller, and others, in support of”Gurr’s general character, when the same had not been impeached by the plea of justification.
Judgment reversed.
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