Flaherty v. People's Bank of Mobile

113 So. 910, 216 Ala. 542, 1927 Ala. LEXIS 241
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 30, 1927
Docket1 Div. 423.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 113 So. 910 (Flaherty v. People's Bank of Mobile) 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
Flaherty v. People's Bank of Mobile, 113 So. 910, 216 Ala. 542, 1927 Ala. LEXIS 241 (Ala. 1927).

Opinion

Statement by SOMERVILLE, J.:

The following statement of the case taken from the brief of counsel for appellant is not materially controverted by counsel for appellee, and is substantially correct:

"The complaint contained only one count, which was in the statutory form in an action for conversion of personal property. The property *Page 543 sued for consisted of a large number of different articles, including the dredge boat Texas, an iron launch, a wooden launch, and a large quantity of machinery, boilers, engines, and the like. The testimony was entirely without dispute as to substantially all of the property, except as to the value of the property sued upon. It appeared from this testimony, without any controversy whatever, that the appellee, the People's Bank, sued out an attachment against William H. Flaherty, who was the father of the plaintiff, in the circuit court of Mobile county, and caused the same to be levied upon the property Which the complaint describes as the property of the appellant, Harry F. Flaherty. The property was sold by the sheriff under the attachment, and was purchased at the sheriff's sale by the defendant, the People's Bank, who in turn sold it to the Baker Sand Gravel Company, after being notified by the plaintiff and his father that the property levied upon belonged to the plaintiff and not to his father, who was the defendant in the attachment.

"The writ of attachment and the return of the sheriff showing this levy was introduced in evidence, and the defendant in its answers to interrogatories admitted, and the testimony of William H. Flaherty and A. L. Staples showed, that the attachment was levied upon the property; that the defendant became the purchaser, took possession of, and resold, the property.

"According to the testimony of the two Flahertys as to certain of these articles, the Gulf Wrecking Company had shipped them from New York to Mobile over the Mobile Ohio Railroad, and were not able to pay the freight, and they were about to be sold by the railroad for the freight, when it was agreed between the plaintiff and his father that the plaintiff would pay the freight and take over the property. A number of the articles were bought by him at a sheriff's sale. Only a small percentage of the articles sued for were purchased or acquired by plaintiff from the Gulf Wrecking Company, of which William H. Flaherty was president, or from William H. Flaherty himself. Both of the Flahertys testified that the balance of the property was purchased by the plaintiff from third persons, and paid for by him out of his individual funds, and there was no testimony tending in any way to show that William H. Flaherty, the defendant in attachment, ever had any possession of or claimed any interest in any of the other articles in question.

"The plaintiff, Harry F. Flaherty, testified to his ownership of this property, but he produced vouchers showing that he had bought and paid therefor, in most instances several years before it appeared that William H. Flaherty had contracted any indebtedness with the People's Bank.

"In only one instance was any property purchased from the father. Part of it had been seized, and was about to be sold by the railroad upon a lien for freight, and was purchased by the plaintiff for the freight which his father was unable to pay, and the balance was purchased by the plaintiff at a sheriff's sale under execution against the Gulf Wrecking Company.

"The dredge Texas and a large quantity of machinery and materials, which was the most valuable part of the property involved in this suit, was bought by the plaintiff, Harry F. Flaherty, from the Atlantic, Gulf Pacific Company with which neither the plaintiff's father nor the Gulf Wrecking Company had any connection, and the plaintiff produced the bill of sale from that company to himself showing the purchase of this property; a triple expansion Morris engine of considerable value, together with other items involved in this suit, the plaintiff bought from Gulf Barge Towing Company, Inc., with which the Gulf Wrecking Company and the plaintiff's father had no connection, and he produced the receipt to himself, showing payment for these articles. He bought a yawl from the same company, and produced the receipt of the superintendent showing payment therefor. He thereafter himself installed the two cylinder twenty-horse power motor which is involved in this suit. He bought from one Truex four full sets of acetylene and welding torches and gauges, and produced the receipt of Truex therefor. To this he added an acetylene generator. He bought from John B. Harvey the derrick foot and socket involved in the suit, and produced his receipt therefor. He bought an upright engine 8x10, hand winch derrick, two gasoline engines, one a Cadillac and the other a Pierce-Arrow, and two small hand pumps from the Mississippi river commission and paid freight on them from New Orleans to Mobile. He produced the receipt of the Louisville Nashville Railroad for the freight on these articles. He bought a barge or scow, an iron launch, the skiff, and the sail boat involved in this suit from M. N. Young-blood, and produced his receipt therefor. He purchased from M. Glazier twenty-six circle cog gears for swinging derrick and a lot of other material involved in the suit, and produced his canceled checks in payment therefor. He purchased from Turner Supply Company a duplex pump 10x15, a new Moore and Sly hoisting engine, and bought a 700 pound Worthington duplex hydraulic pump with other property involved in this suit, and produced his canceled checks in payment therefor. He bought from Gulf Refining Company three small tanks and other property involved in this suit, and produced his canceled checks in payment therefor. The fact that William H. Flaherty, defendant in attachment, had nothing whatsoever to do with the purchase of these articles is further corroborated by the testimony of William H. Flaherty."

Over plaintiff's objection, the defendant's witness — formerly its president — A. L. Staples, was allowed to testify that, when borrowing money from the bank, William H. Flaherty "claimed everything he had belonged to the Gulf Wrecking Company and W. H. Flaherty, and, when it came time to pay the note, everything he had belonged to H. F. Flaherty," the plaintiff.

The plaintiff, before the jury retired, requested the following charges, in writing, which were refused by the court:

"(1) The court charges the jury that, if they believe the evidence, they must find a verdict for the plaintiff.

"(2) The court charges the jury that, if they believe the undisputed evidence, then they must find a verdict for the plaintiff as to all of the *Page 544 property described in the complaint as to which the jury may find from the evidence that the plaintiff purchased from a third person other than Mr. W. H. Flaherty, and had possession of under a claim of ownership, and that it was taken from his possession without his consent by the sheriff under a writ of attachment against Mr. W. H. Flaherty and sold to the defendant, and sold by the defendant to a third person.

"(3) The court charges the jury that, if the plaintiff obtained a part of the property in suit by purchase from third persons other than W. H. Flaherty, and had possession of it, claiming ownership, and the sheriff levied an attachment on it at the suit of the defendant, and sold it to the defendant, and the defendant sold it to another, then the defendant is liable to the plaintiff for the value thereof, wholly irrespective of whether the plaintiff paid for it when he bought it, or whether the consideration that he agreed to pay for it was large or small.

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Related

Mobile Light R. Co. v. Phillips
135 So. 424 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 So. 910, 216 Ala. 542, 1927 Ala. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flaherty-v-peoples-bank-of-mobile-ala-1927.