1. As to the jurisdiction of the ordinary to require the representatives of Castleberry to execute a title to Ford, the case is governed by section 2549 of the Code, which reads as follows: “If the intestate, during his'life, executed a bond to make titles to land, and dies without making such titles, the holder of such bond, after having complied with its conditions, may apply to the ordinary having jurisdiction over the estate, for an order requiring the administra
2. The brief of evidence is referred to by Judge Hall as requisite to modify the statements of fact in the second ground of the motion for a new trial, and the brief makes a clear case for the admission of the letters which purport to have been written by the complainant. There was prima facie evidence that they were in his handwriting. Was he a competent witness to disprove their genuineness? Castle-berry, to whom they seem to have been written, being dead, and the main question in the controversy on tidal being, whether he died seized of the premises in dispute, or whether he had passed title, legal or equitable, to the complainant, the force of the letters lay in the admissions which they contained. If the letters were genuine, these admissions were made to the deceased, and doubtless influenced his action ; at least, they were of a nature calculated to influence it. He could not be heard, being dead; and to hear the complainant in denial of written admissions apparently made to the deceased, would be as objectionable as to hear him in denial of the contract apparently made with him. If the instruments were deeds instead of letters, the complainant would certainly be incompetent to prove them a forgery ; and, as these instruments, though letters, are important evidence on the line of disclaimer, it seems to us that the same principle applies. This is a much stronger case for holding the rule of incompetency than was the case in 44 Ga., 46.
3. The court charged the jury, that if the complainant had paid the purchase money he was entitled to a decree. The parts of the charge excepted to were thus qualified, and rested on the hypothesis that the purchase money was unpaid. Viewed in this light, the correctness of the charge, in so far as it was adverse to the complainant, cannot be doubtful, and the third head note needs no expansion. The finding of the jury evinces that in their opinion the
4, o, 6, 7. It appeared that, though the defendant and the juror rode together, they had no conversation touching the case while the trial was in progress. ITow they came . to unite in passing to and from the court was explained. The brief of evidence was certainly amendable. To suffer counsel to adjourn a case from term to vacation would be quite impracticable. In the argument before us it was urged that Judge Hall had no right to add marginal notes in revising the motion for a new trial. We see no objection to the practice. The judge may both explain and vindicate his rulings. By doing so he may subserve the cause of truth and justice.
Judgment affirmed.