Elrod Lumber Co. v. Moore

65 So. 175, 186 Ala. 430, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 715
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 18, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 65 So. 175 (Elrod Lumber Co. v. Moore) 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
Elrod Lumber Co. v. Moore, 65 So. 175, 186 Ala. 430, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 715 (Ala. 1913).

Opinion

de GRAFFENRIED, J. —

This action was on tbe common* counts. There was a plea of tbe general issue and also certain special pleas of recoupment. Tbe pleas in recoupment set-up that tbe cause of action arose upon [432]*432certain express agreements which the plaintiff breached. They alleged that the defendant suffered damages on account of the alleged breach of said agreement by the plaintiff in sums greater than the amount sued for by the plaintiff, and prayed judgment against the plaintiff for the excess.

1. The real bone of contention between the parties was whether the defendant (appellant here) owed the plaintiff (appellee here) anything on an account.

There were some written contracts between the parties, whereby, the plaintiff agreed to sell the defendant certain property, to perform certain labor for, and to furnish certain teams to, the defendant. The plaintiff’s insistence was that he had performed his agreements, that the defendant owed him the money sued for, as the balance remaining unpaid for the services rendered and the property sold under said agreement, and that all that remained to be done under said contract was the payment by the defendant to the plaintiff of the sum so due the plaintiff by the defendant. The defendant, on the contrary, claimed that the plaintiff had not performed his contract, but had breached it, and that the defendant not only did not owe the plaintiff anything, but that the plaintiff, having damaged the defendant by reason of the breach of the contract, was really indebted to the defendant.

We direct attention to the fact that in this case the plaintiff sued the defendant, not for damages for a breach of an express agreement, but for money which he claimed to be due him for services performed for, and property sold to, the defendant, under the terms of express agreements. The defendant, in its pleas, on the other hand, set up a breach by the plaintiff of the agreements, not only as a complete defense to the action, but as a basis upon which to recoup a claimed excess due by the plaintiff.

[433]*4332. When money is due under the terms of an express contract, and nothing, under that contract, remains to be done by the parties to it but the payment of a sum of money, then the party to whom the money is due may maintain an action upon the common counts against the debtor for the money so due. In such a case the plaintiff may either declare specially upon the agreement, or he may sue, as stated, upon the common counts. If, on the other hand, the suit is for damages for the breach by the defendant of an express contract, the plaintiff must declare specially upon the contract, and must aver the breach by the defendant of the contract.—Beadle v. Graham’s Adm’r, 66 Ala. 101; Woodrow v. Hawving, 105 Ala. 240, 16 South. 720; Abercrombie & Williams, v. Vandiver, 126 Ala. 532, 28 South. 491.

The above, of course, relates to the form of .the plaintiff’s action and his rights under the form which he sees proper to adopt. It has nothing whatever- to do with the character of the defense which the defendant may make to the action, no matter what form the plaintiff may see proper to adopt. Of course, if a plaintiff sees proper to sue upon the common counts, and he shows only a right to damages for a breach by the defendant of the terms of an executory contract, the plaintiff simply fails to make out his case and cannot recover.-—Beadle v. Graham’s Adm’r, supra.

3. Where a plaintiff sues upon the common counts, and the amount involved is the sum which the plaintiff claims to be due him by the defendant under the terms of an express contract, the form of the action does not cut from the defendant any defense which he might have made to the suit if the contract had been specially declared upon.—Woodrow v. Hawving, supra.

The defendant in this case, therefore, was properly allowed to file, not only á plea of the general issue, but [434]*434also his pleas of recoupment, whereby he undertook to show, not only that the plaintiff breached the contracts under which the cause of action arose, but also that the defendant was damaged by reason of such breaches.—Woodrow v. Hawving, supra.

In the instant case, as we understand the evidence and its tendencies, the contracts between the parties were at an end. The only questions were whether the defendant owed the plaintiff any money by reason of the dealings of the parties with each other under the terms of said contracts, and whether, during their course of dealing with each other, there were breaches of said contracts by the plaintiff, and, if so, the amount of the defendant’s damages. These were matters, under the laAV, the pleadings, and the evidence, which were the subject of legitimate inquiry.—Woodrow v. Harving, supra.

4. The law casts the burden upon every defendant who files a special plea in bar of the plaintiff’s right of recovery to establish, by evidence, to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury, the fact set up in the special plea. In the instant case one of the facts set up in each special plea of the defendant was that the basis of the plaintiff’s righth of recovery was a special contract which the plaintiff had breached. The court, therefore, properly charged the jury that, to establish these special pleas, the law cast the burden upon the defendant to show, to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury, by evidence, that the plaintiff had committed the breaches complained of, and as, in said pleas, the defendant claimed that the plaintiff had damaged him by reason of such breaches, the amount of such damages. These pleas were in fact countersuits by the defendant against the plaintiff, and of course the law cast upon the defendant the burden of establishing, to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury, the breaches of the contract set up [435]*435in said pleas.—O’Neal v. Curry, 134 Ala. 216, 32 South. 697.

It must be remembered that in this suit the contracts, were not sued upon by the plaintiff. This, as already stated, was an action upon the common counts, and the contracts were simply evidential of the plaintiff’s right of recovery. The defendant’s special pleas, on the-other hand, were in effect, declarations by the defendant' against the plaintiff upon said contracts, and we think it plain that the law as well as the pleadings cast the burden, in this form of action, upon the defendant-just as the trial judge stated the law to the jury in his oral charge.—Woodrow v. Hawving, supra.

The true rule, as we understand the rule, covering-cases like the present, is contained in the following from Collier, C. J., in Hunter v. Waldron, 7 Ala. 753: “The-general rule may be thus stated, where the terms of a special unsealed agreement have been performed by the plaintiff, so that only a duty to pay the money remains, indebtitatus assumpsit will lie. But, where the contract is still open, or is to be performed in future, theicount must be framed on the contract. See the cases collected in 1 Metc. & P. Dig. 275, §§ 184, 185; Sykes v. Summerel, 2 Browne (Pa.) 225; Wellington v. West Boylston, 4 Pick. (Mass.) 101.

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Bluebook (online)
65 So. 175, 186 Ala. 430, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elrod-lumber-co-v-moore-ala-1913.