The defendant in error sued out a distress warrant in Gwinnett county against the plaintiff in error, alleging that “George Summerour, col., tenant of said Felker, and of said county, is justly indebted to the said J. H. Felker one hundred dollars for rent of one farm in said Gwinnett county near Windsor, for the year 1895.” - This warrant, having been levied on certain personal property of the defendant therein, was met by a counter-affidavit, averring that the sum dis-trained for was not due at the time of issuing the warrant, that he never rented any land from Felker and did not owe him any rent for any land in said county for the year 1895, or any other year. The issue so raised came before the city court for trial. An amendment to the distress warrant was allowed by the court, and the case went to a jury, and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff. A petition for certiorari was sued out and sanctioned, and on the hearing in the superior court the certiorari was overruled, and the plaintiff in error excepted. During the trial of the case in the city court, the plaintiff offered in evidence an original promissory note, a copy of which is as follows:
“Monroe, Ga., April 14, 1894. As purchase-money for the Sack Carter place near Windsor in Walton county, Ga., containing two hundred and eighty acres, more or less, I promise to pay J. H. Felker or bearer twelve hundred dollars ($1,200), payable in installments as follows: $300 November 1, 1895, November 1, 1896, $300 November 1, 1897, and $300 November 1, 1898, respectively, with interest from date at eight per cent, per annum, and ten per cent, on principal and interest if collected by law. And I hereby waive any and all homestead exemptions against the payment of this note. If I should fail or refuse to pay the first payment, then at the option of said Felker the relation of landlord and tenant shall exist for the year 1895 at a rental of $100. These installments can be paid in middling cotton, delivered in Monroe, at seven cents per pound, if I should desire to so pay them. Witness my hand and seal.
“Witnessed by George Summerour. (Seal.)
F. F. Nowell. , .7. A. Austin. (Seal.)”
1. It must be conceded that this note was not the foundation of the action instituted by the plaintiff below; it was not declared on. The plaintiff’s case rested on the averment in his affidavit, that the defendant was indebted to him in a given amount for reñí of land for the year 1895, which was due. This was the cause of action, and on his affidavit being made to that effect, the process issued as a matter of law, without regard to whether the evidence of the fact of such indebtedness was in writing or not—whether if it was in writing it was in the shape of‘a promissory note or other contract. It was not sought to recover rent due on a written contract, but to recover rent which was due and unpaid.
The writing offered in evidence contained a promise to pay a certain sum of money as rent, and by construction at a given time, on the happening of a certain event; and contained a stipulation which under certain circumstances would create the relation of landlord and tenant between the parties. It was witnessed by F. F. Nowell. To be good, it was not essential that its execution should have been attested by a subscribing witness. But the parties chose to have it so, and such was their right. Was it legally admitted, in the absence of proof of its execution by the subscribing witness to the instrument? Mr. Greenleaf, in his Law of Evidence, vol. 1, §569, lays down the rule to be, that, “The instrument being produced and freed from suspicion, must be proved by the subscribing witnesses, if there be any, or at least one of them.” The witness is a witness to the execution; the instrument in question was executed, not by the plaintiff below, but by the defendant there; and “the party to whose execution he is a witness is considered as invoking him as the person to whom he refers to prove what passed at the time of the attestation”;
Our Civil Code, § 5244, lays down as a rule, that the subscribing witness must be produced in all cases except the following : first, ancient writings; second, when witness can not be produced; third, office bonds; fourth, if the paper is only incidentally or collaterally material' to the case; fifth, if the party executing testifies to its execution. Being neither an ancient writing nor an office bond, the plaintiff in error not having testified to its execution, there being, as appears from the record, no effort to procure the testimony of the subscribing witness nor in any way account for him, the sole question to determine is, whether the paper is only incidentally or collaterally material to the case. We have endeavored to show it was not the foundation of the action, and thus admissible under another principle. Civil Code, § 5066. If the paper .is only “incidentally or collaterally material to the case,” the subscribing witness need not be produced. Collateral: facts are those which are not directly involved or connected with the principal issue or matter in dispute. R. & L. Law Diet. We take this provision of the code to mean that where such facts which yet have sufficient bearing on the case to ■be,admitted under the rules of evidence are offered and- are.in writing, then because they are collateral and incidental, and because they are not directly involved, the writing may go in without proof of execution by the subscribing witness. The writing designated as the promissory note contained the contract of rent between the parties, and when the counter-affidavit put that contract in issue, the plaintiff sought by his writing to establish it. Being in writing, it was the highest and- best evidence of the fact. It could be scarcely said, when the issue on trial was whether the defendant owed the plaintiff anything
2. We are aware that the doctrine of amendments has been carried to a very great extent, not only by the decisions of this court, but also by legislative enactment. The latter of course will be interpreted so as to give expression to the legislative intent. But there is a limit under the law as it exists of the right to amend. So far as I am concerned, I think that limit has been reached by the exceeding liberal interpretation of the statutes already given by this court, and beyond the point already reached it ought not to be extended. Surely, a plaintiff should know better than any one else the fact that another is indebted to him and the manner in which such indebtedness was incurred. With this knowledge he has not only the choice of a forum in which his complaint shall be lodged, but ample time and opportunity to set forth, his cause of action in an orderly and proper manner; and if he fails by his own laches so to do, he does not deserve the sympathy of the law, but his opponent, who is only called on to defend the case as made, should not be subjected to the delays, inconvenience, and expense of waitingj after he has appeared in court, until the plaintiff has completed his voyage of discovery and found some dry land upon which his feet can rest. I speak only for myself.
The acts of 1887 and 1889, in relation to amendments of
Where the plaintiff sued to recover damages because of in
Because the court erred in admitting the contract in evidence without due proof of its execution, and in allowing the amendment offered', the
Judgment is reversed.