Reversing.
This is a second appeal and as the issues raised in the pleadings and the proof heard thereon are set out in detail in the former opinion reported in Citizens Bank of Morehead v. Nickell,
We have read with care the evidence adduced on both trials and there is no material difference in the two bills of evidence, except on the second trial the defendants introduced six witnesses in an attempt to impeach Hunt for truth and veracity. Three of these witnesses, Custer Ramsey, Melvin Hamm and Jack Helwig, testified they had never heard Hunt's reputation discussed within two years before the trial, hence the trial judge held they did not qualify as character witnesses. *Page 648
Oscar Jackson testified Hunt's reputation was bad, but on cross-examination it developed he had never heard anybody discuss it, and the witness based his testimony largely on the fact that he paid a surety debt for Hunt. Therefore, the trial judge correctly excluded Jackson's testimony.
While the court did not exclude the testimony of Mrs. Beulah Williams as to Hunt's reputation, he should have. On cross-examination she stated she had testified Hunt's reputation for truth and veracity was bad because he did not pay her a note and had not told her the truth. One's general reputation is not what another person may know or think about him, but it is the estimate in which he is held by the people generally with whom he associates and comes in contact with in everyday life. Davenport v. Com.,
Robert Bishop testified he had heard Hunt's reputation discussed and it was bad for truth and veracity. But on cross-examination it developed that this witness had only heard his reputation discussed as to payment of debts; he could not name one person whom he had heard discuss Hunt's reputation for veracity. That a person's general reputation for morality or veracity is bad may be shown only by positive testimony that his neighbors and associates have so spoken of him until such has become a part of his general reputation. It must be proved by affirmative testimony, but one may prove his general reputation for morality and veracity is good by showing that it has never been brought into question. Davenport v. Com., supra.
The defendants failed in their efforts to impeach Hunt and no attack was made upon Davis' reputation. As this is the only particular in which the testimony is different from that heard on the first trial, it is apparent that under the law of the case rule we must again say that the verdict is so flagrantly against the evidence as to indicate that it was the result of passion and prejudice on the part of the jury. The first opinion reversing the judgment for the reason indicated was written March 17, 1939. On January 12, 1940, Nugent et al. v. Nugent's Ex'r,
The judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.