Cooke v. Embry

123 So. 27, 219 Ala. 623, 1929 Ala. LEXIS 316
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 23, 1929
Docket7 Div. 863.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 123 So. 27 (Cooke v. Embry) 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
Cooke v. Embry, 123 So. 27, 219 Ala. 623, 1929 Ala. LEXIS 316 (Ala. 1929).

Opinion

SAYRE, J.

Action in assumpsit by appellee against appellant. The Bankhead highway .was being located across the lower end of Saint Olair county in the neighborhood of Cook’s Springs. Appellant owned the springs and landed property adjacent thereto. The location of the highway was a matter of interest and, as he conceived, financial concern *626 for him. It had once been located by a survey which ran through his springs property and some of his trees had been felled to make a way for it. But then a new location was made a mile or'more to the north, with rough country — a small mountain — intervening. Appellant desired that the highway commission would order that the highway be relocated along or near the route first selected — plaintiff testified that the general notion was to move the road from the north to the south side of the railroad — and employed appellee,, a practising attorney, to put his case before the commission. According to the appellee and his witness Lewis, who kept a store south of the railroad, the parties had no personal Communication. The employment was arranged by Lewis and in pursuance of his suggestion to appellant. If appellant expected appellee to employ any questionable means in order to bring about a change of location, or a return to the vicinity of the first lopation, there -was nothing said or done affirmatively to disclose such understanding or purpose on either hand. That was a matter, to state it with possibly too great favor to appellant, resting in inference to he drawn from the evidence as a whole and by the jury alone, and so, as well as we can read the dimly written transcript, the trial judge left it to be determined. There is no need to restate at length the law of the case. That law has been twice reviewed in our recent cases of Bush v. Russell, 180 Ala. 590, 61 So. 373, and Anderson v. Blair, 202 Ala. 209, 80 So. 31. Many cases on the same subject are cited under the text of 13 C. J. p. 433, which has been consulted. Having in mind the language and substance of those cases, we state our conception of the case in hand as follows: There was no contract for the performance of any act illegal per se, or that appellee should do anything of a corrupting tendency, or which by its terms or by necessary implication contemplated a resort to improper means, or anything other than an appeal to the reason of the highway commission, whose action was sought, or to obtain its action as a personal favor rather than as a matter of right and public justice. It was as much a matter of public policy that all considerations properly affecting the location of the road be heard and weighed as that no improper approaches be allowed. If the contract between the parties contemplated any action contrary to public policy or offensive to public morality, that purpose must needs be discovered behind a veil of words which on their face were innocent enough and the discovery must have been left to the jury as the court left it. Certainly the court cannot say upon the record that anything improper was said or done in reaching the agreement ¡between the parties. The jury found no sinister purpose nor any improper practice and we are unable to say as matter of law or preponderating tendency of the evidence that the jury were in error.

There was no error in allowing plaintiff to show the situation of defendant’s property at Cook’s Springs. The facts as to that served a lawful purpose as going to show that defendant had a legitimate interest in the employment of plaintiff to represent him before the highway commission.

There was no error in the ruling by which the court refused to allow defendant to ask the witness Lewis what was in his m'-nd when he talked to Cooke about the location of the road. By numerous decisions it has been ruled that a witness may not testify to his uncommunicated opinions, beliefs, purposes, or interests. That is the law of this state. Alabama Power Co. v. Edwards, ante, p. 162, 121 So. 543.

What the witness Lewis afterwards said to M. M. Smith — Smith was an engineer in the employment of the highway commission — as to what was in the mind of defendant was of no materiality in the absence of a showing that plaintiff or defendant had authorized such statement. Nor was it shown that the statement would have been material in any event. There was no error.

Assignment of error 9. There was no error in allowing the plaintiff to show when the amount in controversy, or a part of it, fell due. The due date affected interest to be assessed in the event of a finding for plaintiff.

What public office plaintiff held, so long as it did not disqualify him to act as an attorney or to appear in that capacity before the highway commission, was a matter of no consequence. Defendant rhade no suggestion that plaintiff was disqualified in either respect.

Whether defendant objected to the final location of the road, or whether some of his land was more valuable than some other, or whether defendant owned practically all the land south of the road as located, were matters immaterial as tending to disprove plaintiff’s case, for which purpose we presume defendant asked for them. The questions at issue were: Was plaintiff employed? What was he employed to do? Was he employed at an agreed price, as plaintiff contended? Was his employment immoral or otherwise contrary to public policy?

The general charge requested by defendant was refused without error. The evidence was in conflict, to say the least of plaintiff’s case. Defendant contends that plaintiff, if employed at all, was employed to have the survey for the road restored to its first location precisely. The evidence for plaintiff tended to show that he was employed to have the second survey changed from the north to the south side of the railroad, which ran east and west near the springs, but to no particular place — 'though it is clear 'enough that defendant desired to have the highway in close proximity to the springs — and that it could not be located exactly in the first place because the engineers for the federal govern *627 ment had vetoed that location, and that it was finally located south of the railroad and within 300 yards of the springs. The issues thus presented were properly and necessarily for jury decision, and the general charge, requested in several shapes, was refused without error.

There was no evidence of any suppression of fac.t by plaintiff in his communication with the highway commission, or its engineers. The evidence went to show without dispute that plaintiff appeared at a public hearing before the commission; that he discussed the matter of a new location with the engineers in their offices, with the engineer in charge of location on the ground, and upon one occasion with the chairman of the commission in his room at the Exchange Hotel, in Montgomery. So far as appears in the evidence, there was nothing said or done to indicate that appellee had any personal interest other than to serve his employer and earn his fee. To that interest he had a right, and the only disputed question was whether he had resorted to improper or unlawful means in order to secure the end desired. We conceive of no controlling reason why he should have been required to state specifically that he represented defendant for a compensation.

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Bluebook (online)
123 So. 27, 219 Ala. 623, 1929 Ala. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooke-v-embry-ala-1929.