Fegaro v. South Central Bell

252 So. 2d 66, 287 Ala. 407, 1971 Ala. LEXIS 740
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 3, 1971
Docket6 Div. 784
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 252 So. 2d 66 (Fegaro v. South Central Bell) 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
Fegaro v. South Central Bell, 252 So. 2d 66, 287 Ala. 407, 1971 Ala. LEXIS 740 (Ala. 1971).

Opinion

McCALL, Justice.

This is an appeal by the respondent, Ervin M. Fegaro, from a final decree in a declaratory judgment proceeding which the complainant, South Central Bell Telephone Company, a corporation, (South Central) filed against the respondents, William E. Baker and Comet T.V. Inc., a Kentucky corporation, in which Baker is

principally interested, and, against the corespondents, Ervin M. Fegaro and Comet T.V. Rentals, Inc., an Alabama corporation, in which Fegaro is the principal executive officer. Hereafter, we will call each of them “respondent.” None of the respondents other than Fegaro has appealed.

The appellant Fegaro’s first assignment of error is that the court erred in entering an order or decree overruling and denying a plea in abatement filed jointly by him and Comet T.V. Rentals Inc. 1 The basis for the plea in abatement is that all of the issues, sought to be resolved in the present case, can be and should be resolved in an already pending civil action before the United States District Court, wherein all of the parties, or those in privity, are said to be the same as the parties in this case.

The United States court case was filed by Comet T.V. Inc. against South Central, Fegaro and L. M. Berry and Company, a corporation, on the theory that the defendants had conspired wrongfully to injure the business of Comet T.V. Inc., by depriving it of the use of its trade name “Comet T.V. Rentals” and of the telephone number listed under that trade name in the yellow pages of the telephone directory, by transferring the number and trade name listing to Fegaro. Neither William E. Baker or Comet T.V. Rentals Inc. was made a party to the federal case, brought by Comet T.V. Inc,, a corporation, nor is L. M. Berry and Company a party to the case at bar.

This court has held that in the State of Alabama the pendency of a suit in a federal court, with jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties, involving the same cause of action, may be pleaded in abatement of another suit in a court of this State between the same parties and involving the same cause of *410 action. Watson v. Mobile & O. R. Co., 233 Ala. 690, 692, 173 So. 43; Orman v. Lane, 130 Ala. 305, 30 So. 441; Interstate Chemical Corporation v. Home Guano Co., 199 Ala. 583, 75 So. 166; Hudson and Thompson v. First Farmers and Merchants National Bank of Troy, 265 Ala. 557, 93 So.2d 415. With respect to a declaratory judgment proceeding, the rule which prevails generally is that jurisdiction will not be entertained, if there is pending, at the time of the declaratory action, another action or proceeding to which the same persons are parties and in which are involved, and may be adjudicated, the same identical issues that are involved in the declaratory action. Foreman v. Smith, 272 Ala. 624, 133 So.2d 497. In such a situation, the deciding issue seems to be that the plea in abatement is not available, unless the judgment, that could be rendered in the prior action, would be conclusive between the parties of all the issues raised by the second action. The reason for sustaining such a plea is that the later action is deemed to be unnecessary and vexatious. Foster v. Napier, 73 Ala. 595, 604; Ex parte Gurganus, 251 Ala. 361, 37 So.2d 591; Priest v. Chenault, 239 Ala. 209, 194 So. 651; Milbra v. Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co., 182 Ala. 622, 62 So. 176, 46 L.R.A.,N.S., 274; Williams v. Gaston, 148 Ala. 214, 42 So. 552; Hudson and Thompson v. First Farmers and Merchants National Bank, supra.

The appellant Fegaro argues that while all of the same parties are not present in each case, they or those in privity with them, are so present, and that all are represented in the material issue of which of the two customers, the appellant Ervin M. Fegaro, on the one hand, or Comet T.V. Inc. and its President, William E. Baker, on the other, is entitled to have a telephone listing under the trade name, “Comet T.V. Rentals,” in South Central’s Birmingham area telephone directory for June 1, 1970, and to the telephone number 252-8562.

It appears to us that neither are the issues in the federal case identical with or the same as those in the state case, nor are the parties in the two cases the same. While arriving at a decision in the federal case, as to whether or not the defendants were guilty of a civil conspiracy to injure Comet T.V. Inc. in its business, by depriving it of the use of its trade name, “Comet T.V. Rentals,” may involve the question of Comet T.V. Inc.’s right to that trade name, any judgment rendered will not conclude the contested issue in the state case of whether or not South Central has the right to list them under each respondent’s individual or corporate name, or, in the alternative, the right to refuse to list any or all of the respondents in the 1970 Birmingham telephone directory. Further, such judgment will not conclude the issue of whether or not South Central has to assign in its 1970 telephone directory the particular telephone number 252-8562, to any of the respondents as is demanded of it by each respondent in the state case, or, has the right to deny the use of that number to each of the respondents and assign each of them a new telephone number. The relief which South Central prays for looks prospectively. Those are issues that are made in the state case which w: do not find are made or will be concluded in the federal case.

Next, even if these issues, of who is entitled to have the trade name, Comet T.V. Rentals, and the assignment of the telephone number, are to be resolved, in the federal case, in favor of or against Comet T.V. Inc. or Fegaro, one or the other, that will not decide and conclude in the state case, Comet T.V. Rentals, Inc.’s alleged insistence and demand on South Central, nor the rights, if any, of the respondent William E. Baker. Comet T.V. Rentals, Inc., a corporation, though in existence when filed, is not a party to the federal case and cannot be bound by the judgment there simply because the appellant Fegaro, its principal executive officer and stockholder, is a party to the *411 federal case. The bill of complaint here alleges like insistences and demands, made hy the respondent William E. Baker, the person principally interested in Comet T.V. Inc., a corporation, hut Baker was not a party to the federal case either. By the same token, he cannot be precluded by the federal case because of his personal relationship with that corporation. In the situation presented, we recognize the doctrine of corporate fiction existing between the corporation and the individual, primarily interested and controlling the corporate body. In Moore & Handley Hardware Co. v. Towers Hardware Co., 87 Ala. 206, 210, 6 So. 41, 43, the court said:

“2. The general doctrine is well established, and obtains both at law and in equity, that a corporation is a distinct entity, to be considered separate and apart from the individuals who compose it, and is not to be affected by the personal rights and obligations and transactions of its stockholders, and this whether said rights accrued or obligations were incurred before or subsequent to incorporation. * * * ”

Loper v. Gill, 282 Ala. 614, 213 So.2d 674; Navco Hardware Co. v. Bass, 214 Ala. 553, 108 So. 452; Rudisill Soil Pipe Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
252 So. 2d 66, 287 Ala. 407, 1971 Ala. LEXIS 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fegaro-v-south-central-bell-ala-1971.