Berman v. Wreck-A-Pair Bldg. Co.

182 So. 54, 236 Ala. 301, 1938 Ala. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 16, 1938
Docket6 Div. 287, 290, 291.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 182 So. 54 (Berman v. Wreck-A-Pair Bldg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berman v. Wreck-A-Pair Bldg. Co., 182 So. 54, 236 Ala. 301, 1938 Ala. LEXIS 177 (Ala. 1938).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

There are three, appeals on the record, the first: 6 Div. 287, by Robert Berman, trading as Berman Bros. Iron & Metal Co., from the interlocutory decree of the court, of January 25, 1938, overruling said defendant’s separate demurrer to the bill. 6 Div. 290, is the appeal of the defendant Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, from the same decree overruling its separate demurrer to the bill. 6 Div. 291, is the appeal of the complainant, Wreck-A-Pair Building Company, from the decretal order of the court dissolving the injunction granted and issued March 5, 1937.

In respect to the appeal last mentioned, 6 Div. 291, the appellant submitted without assignment of error. -Therefore, the decree from which that appeal is taken will be affirmed, the cost of the appeal incurred in the circuit court 'and in this court is taxed against said appellant Wreck-A-Pair Building Company. Redd Chemical & Nitrate Co. v. W. T. Clay Mercantile Co., 219 Ala. 478, 122 So. 652; Kinney v. White et al., White et al. v. Kinney, 215 Ala. 247, 110 So. 394.

The appellee, Wreck-A-Pair Building Company, named in the other appeals, has submitted a motion to dismiss the same on the ground that one appeal has already been prosecuted by the defendant Berman, trading as Berman Bros. Iron & Metal Company, under § 8307 of the Code, from the decree or fiat granting the injunction, which decree also passed on the demurrers to the bill, and on that appeal the equity of the bill was upheld. Berman v. Wreck-A-Pair Bldg. Co., 234 Ala. 293, 175 So. 269.

The motion is rested upon the provisions of § 6080 of the Code 1923, embodied in Article 1, Chapter 257, dealing with appeals generally, and immediately following § 6079, authorizing appeals from decrees “sustaining or overruling a demurrer to a bill in equity, or to a cross bill, * * * to be taken within thirty days from the rendition thereof.”

Section 8307 is embraced within Chapter. 304 of the Code, dealing with injunctions and' the granting thereof, and authorizes an appeal to the Supreme Court, “From the order granting or refusing the writ of injunction,” to be taken “within ten days, to be heard as preferred cases in that court, on the first Thursday the court is in session after the expiration o.f the ten days, or as soon thereafter as may be.”

Section 6080 provides:

“Only one appeal to test equity of bill, complaint or petition allowed. — -Whenever the equity of a bill, complaint or petition has been tested and upheld by the supreme court on an appeal from any interlocutory order, judgment, or decree, no other appeal can be. taken from any subsequent interlocutory order, judgment or decree; but the rulings of the trial court on any such interlocutory orders, judgments or decrees may be reviewed by the supreme court on appeal from the final judgment.” [Italics supplied.]

*304 We are of opinion that it was the legislative intent to deny more than one appeal from interlocutory, orders, judgments or decrees, the appeals from which are provided for in Article 1, Chapter 257 of the Code, 1923, and that appeals from orders or fiats granting or refusing injunctions are not within the influence of § 6080 of the Code. This statute has been so applied in all of our decisions dealing with the question.

In Brasher v. Grayson, 219 Ala. 631, 122 So. 881, the appeal was from an interlocutory decree appointing a receiver authorized by § 6082 of the Code.

The motion to dismiss said appeals, is therefore overruled. Thomas et al. v. Skeggs, 218 Ala. 562, 119 So. 610; Alabama Water Service Co. v. City of Anniston, 217 Ala. 271, 116 So. 124; Thomasson v. Benson Hardware Co., 224 Ala. 11, 138 So. 287; Alexander et al. v. Landers et al., 230 Ala. 167, 160 So. 342.

6 Div. 287.

On the former appeal the case was treated, as a bill (page 274), “filed under the Declaratory Judgment Act [Gen.St. 1935, p. 777] to construe the contracts, alleged to be ambiguous, to adjudge the rights of each contractor in the various properties in dispute, to have an accounting by the railroad company for the values of items sold to complainant, but to which Berman had the title; and to have Berman account for articles alleged to have been taken and removed to which complainant had title.”

The court observed;

“Without going into details, the bill presents a case of justiciable controversies, construing the contracts and declaring the rights of each of the parties in properties to which conflicting rights of possession and ownership are being asserted. The question of who is entitled to salvage the articles or materials is also involved.
“It should be kept in mind that the equity of a bill under the Declaratory Judgment Act does not turn on whether a case is made for an injunction.
“This is a statutory jurisdiction, to be exercised in the cases and to the ends defined by- statute, does not depend on the absence of other remedies. It is alternate in character. One of its chief fields is to define legal rights, obligations, and relations over which real and substantial controversies have arisen before there has been an invasion of rights giving rise to other forms of action^ * * *
“Further relief may be had in such proceeding if necessary to complete relief. Gen.Acts 1935, p. 777, § 8.”

The court by these utterances, when considered in the light of the provisions of the Declaratory Judgment Act, found in § 1, dealing with “Scope” as follows:

“Courts of record within their respective jurisdictions shall have .power to declare rights, status, and other legal relations whether or not further relief is or could be claimed. No action or proceeding shall be open to objection on the ground that a declaratory judgment or decree is prayed for. The declaration may be either affirmative or negative in form and effect; and such declarations shall have the force and effect of a final judgment or decree.” [Italics supplied.]

And § 8, “Supplemental Relief,” providing, that:

“Further relief based on a declaratory judgment or decree may be granted whenever necessary or proper. The application therefor 'shall be by petition to a court having jtirisdiction to grant the relief. If the application be deemed sufficient, the court shall, on reasonable notice, require any adverse party whose rights have been adjudicated by the declaratory judgment or decree, to show cause why further relief should not be granted forthwith,” holds that in exercising the jurisdiction “to declare; rights, status, and other legal relations”. — in granting purely declaratory relief — the question of the absence or not of other adequate remedies is not material. But we do not construe this language to mean that the Declaratory Judgment Act had the effect to obliterate the distinction between proceedings in equity and actions at law in giving coercive relief. [Italics supplied].

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Bluebook (online)
182 So. 54, 236 Ala. 301, 1938 Ala. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berman-v-wreck-a-pair-bldg-co-ala-1938.