Strouse v. Kelly

Decision Date23 May 1901
Citation113 Ga. 575,38 S.E. 957
PartiesSTROUSE et al. v. KELLY.
CourtGeorgia Supreme Court

MOTION FOR NONSUIT.

A motion to nonsuit presents for decision the sole question whether or not the evidence for the plaintiff, upon the assumption that it is true, makes out the case set forth in his petition.

(Syllabus by the Court.)

Error from superior court, Jasper county John C. Hart, Judge.

Action by Strouse Bros, against J. H. Kelly. Judgment for defendant, and plaintiffs bring error. Reversed.

Greene F. Johnson, for plaintiffs in error.

Fleming Jordan & Son, for defendant in error.

LUMPKIN, P. J. This case falls squarely within the familiar and well-established principle that a motion to nonsuit presents for decision the sole question whether or not the evidence introduced in behalf of the plaintiff, upon the assumption that it is true, makes out the case set forth in his petition. See the recent case of Reeves v. Jackson, 113 Ga. 182, 38 S. E. 314, in which this rule was stated and applied. Strouse Bros, brought an action against J. H. Kelly upon a promissory note, alleging that, notwithstanding the same appeared on its face to be barred by the statute of limitations, the defendant had, within less than six years of the bringing of the action, "made a written acknowledgment of his existing liability to pay the aforesaid note according to its true tenor and effect." In support of this averment the plaintiffs attached as exhibits to their petition copies of certain letters purporting to have been written by them to the defendant, and also copies of what purported to be his replies thereto. It was, in their petition, also alleged that in two of the letters written by the defendant, which were specifiedby mentioning their dates, "the said J. H. Kelly made such a written acknowledgment of his existing liability to pay your petitioners the aforesaid note as is equivalent in law to a new promise to pay, and became by these aforesaid acknowledgments liable and bound to pay your petitioners the amount of said note, together with interest" thereon. There was no demurrer to the petition, and the case went to trial upon the same and the defendant's answer thereto. The plaintiffs introduced in evidence the original note, and also the originals of all the letters, copies of which were attached as exhibits to their petition, and in other respects proved beyond question every material allegation upon which they relied. At the close of their evidence the court "granted a...

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