Consolidated Graphite Corporation v. Kelly

150 So. 682, 227 Ala. 516, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 9, 1933
Docket7 Div. 207.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 150 So. 682 (Consolidated Graphite Corporation v. Kelly) 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
Consolidated Graphite Corporation v. Kelly, 150 So. 682, 227 Ala. 516, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 60 (Ala. 1933).

Opinion

*518 KNIGHT, Justice.

Trover and trespass. As originally filed, plaintiff, M. P. Kelly, stated his case in one single count. This count attempted to charge a conversion by the defendant, Consolidated Graphite Corporation, of certain grape plants or nursery stock, the property of the plaintiff.

Thereafter, the plaintiff amended his complaint by adding three additional counts, lettered A, B, and C. Count O was subsequently withdrawn by the plaintiff. Count A is in Code form for trespass in talcing goods, while added count B is in Code form for conversion of chattels. Each count, the original as well as the added counts, involved the same property, viz., the grape plants.

The defendant demurred, separately and severally, to each count of the complaint, and this demurrer was overruled by the court.

Confessedly, counts A and B being in form prescribed by the Code were good, and • not subject to any ground of demurrer assigned thereto. J. P. Wolf Co. v. Johnson, 212 Ala. 39, 101 So. 655.

Count 1, however, does not charge a conversion in general terms but proceeds to aver in detail the facts constituting the alleged illegal and wrongful taking and appropriation by the defendant of plaintiff’s grape plants. This being the case, the rule of our decisions is that the merit of the count will be tested- by the sufficiency of the facts averred to show the stated cause of action. In other words, the facts specifically stated must support the general allegation, or the pleading will be bad. J. C. Byram & Co. v. Livingston, 225 Ala. 442, 143 So. 461; J. P. Wolf Co. v. Johnson, supra; Birmingham R., L. & P. Co. v. Weathers, 164 Ala. 23, 51 So. 303; Sheffield Co. v. Morton, 161 Ala. 153, 49 So. 772; Jackson v. Vaughn, 204 Ala. 543, 86 So. 469; Knight v. Tombigbee Valley R. Co., 190 Ala. 140, 142, 67 So. 238; Yarbrough v. Carter, 179 Ala. 356, 60 So. 833.

The facts averred and relied upon to support the general averment of the defendant’s illegal and wrongful taking and appropriation of the plaintiff’s grape plants, fall far short of sustaining the characterization of such facts as an illegal and wrongful taking and appropriation. It is true the averred facts show that the plaintiff in the spring of the year 1928, with the consent of the Alabama Quenelda Graphite Company, set said cuttings on a plot of land belonging to said company, at expense to plaintiff, in purchasing, setting out, and cultivating and caring for said plants, and that he remained in possession of same until on or about the month of May, 1930, yet it further appears from said count that in May, 1930, the defendant became the owner and purchaser of the lands, upon which the plants were growing, under and by virtue of a sale under a federal court decree, and immediately took possession of said land upon which the grape plants were growing. The count wholly fails to show that any duty rested upon the defendant to permit the plaintiff to go upon the land either for the purpose of cultivating, or removing the said plants. The added averment that the plaintiff agreed or offered to pay the defendant a reasonable rent for said land until said plants could be transplanted can add nothing to the count.

For aught averred to the contrary, defendant was rightfully in possession of the land under the federal court decree, and was wholly within its rights in declining to permit plaintiff to enter upon the land to cultivate the plants, or in refusing to permit him to remove the same; and for aught averred to the contrary, the federal court decree con- *519 eluded and determined the right of the plaintiff to the vines, and his right to remove the same. Having confessedly purchased the property under court decree, and having entered thereunder, the specifically averred facts do not show any wrongful taking, detention, or any illegal assumption of ownership, or any illegal user or misuser. Construed in the most favorable light for plaintiff, he was a tenant of the Alabama Quenelda Graphite Company, and it does not appear that he made any effort to avail himself of the statutory right to protect his interest in the vines by securing the Consolidated Graphite Corporation compensation for use and occupation of the land, and that corporation under the facts averred had unquestionably a lien on the vines for such compensation. We hold count 1 insufficient, and subject to the demurrer directed thereto, and the court erred in overruling defendant’s demurrer to this count. Buchmann et al. v. Callahan, 222 Ala. 240, 131 So. 799, 802.

With its demurrer overruled, the defendant filed two special pleas, and when they were held insufficient on demurrer, defendant filed plea of general issue.

The defendant in its first special plea set up that it was the owner of land and of the grape plants under and by virtue of the federal court decree, which was made a part of the plea, “and that the said decrees are res adjudicata of the questions involved in this suit and constitute a complete bar to the plaintiff’s said cause of action.”

For plea 2 the defendant attempts to set up an estoppel against the plaintiff.

In plea 1, the defendant averred that plaintiff in the present suit had brought an action against the defendant and others involving the title to the lands the subject of this suit, which action was tried in the United States District Court for the Eastern Division of the Northern District of Alabama (having been removed from the circuit court of Clay county), which court had jurisdiction of said cause and said parties, being cause No. 51, pending in equity in said court, and which action culminated in a decree of said court in favor of the defendant, adjudging that the defendant herein was the owner of a mortgage upon said lands (the lands upon which the grape plants were growing being a part of the tract) to be sold in payment of said mortgage. It appears from said decree that said lands, pursuant to said decree, were sold by the clerk of said court, acting as special master of the court prior to the 17th day of April, 1930, and at the sale the defendant became the purchaser. This sale was duly reported to the court, and confirmed by the court, and a deed made to the said Consolidated Graphite Corporation. The decrees of the federal court were attached to and made a part of the said pleá 1. The caption and the material paragraphs of the decree follow:

“In the United States District Court for the

Eastern Division of the Northern Dis-

trict of Alabama, in Equity.

“M. P. Kelly, Plaintiff, v. Consolidated Graphite Corporation, Defendant and counter-claimant.

“No. 51.

“This cause came on again to be heard and was submitted on the bill of complaint of plaintiff M. P. Kelly as amended, on the answer and counter-claim, of defendant Consolidated Graphite Corporation, and on the separate answers to said counter-claim'filed by plaintiff M. P. Kelly, W. L. Shumate, Jr., Alabama-Quenelda Graphite Company, North Birmingham Trust and Savings Bank, as trustee, Fritz Worm, as trustee, and M. P. Kelly, as receiver; the intervention of M. P. Kelly, as receiver of Alabama-Quenelda Graphite Company, and the answer of Consolidated Graphite Corporation to the intervention filed by the said M. P.

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150 So. 682, 227 Ala. 516, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-graphite-corporation-v-kelly-ala-1933.