Gulf American Fire and Casualty Co. v. Johnson

209 So. 2d 212, 282 Ala. 73, 1968 Ala. LEXIS 1088
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 11, 1968
Docket8 Div. 211
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 209 So. 2d 212 (Gulf American Fire and Casualty Co. v. Johnson) 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
Gulf American Fire and Casualty Co. v. Johnson, 209 So. 2d 212, 282 Ala. 73, 1968 Ala. LEXIS 1088 (Ala. 1968).

Opinion

*75 COLEMAN, Justice.

Defendant appeals from judgment for plaintiff in an action tried by jury, for money received by defendant to the use of the plaintiff.

The complaint contains one count which recites:

“The plaintiff claims of the defendant TWELVE HUNDRED AND NO/100 DOLLARS ($1200.00), for money on the 19 day of December, 1959, received by the defendant to the use of the plaintiff, which sum of money, with the interest thereon, is still unpaid.”

Defendant filed five pleas. Pleas 1, 2, and 3 are pleas of the general issue. Pleas 4 and 5 undertake to set up the defense of res pidicata. 1

We find no demurrer to any of the pleas. Immediately following the pleas, on three pages of the record, there appears an instrument which the parties call an “agreed statement of fact.” This instrument is signed by attorneys for plaintiff and by the attorney for defendant.

In substance, the agreed statement recites that plaintiff owned forty acres of land on which was a dwelling house; plaintiff executed a mortgage on the land; defendant insured the house against loss by fire for $1,200.00; the policy contained a mortgage clause to effect that in case of loss of house by fire, the proceeds of the policy should be paid to mortgagee; plaintiff made no payment on the. mortgage debt; the policy was in effect on a day when the house was destroyed by fire; the policy provided that defendant shall not be liable for loss occurring while the hazard is increased by means within control or knowledge of insured or while house- is vacant or unoccupied for sixty consecutive days; the policy further provided that if defendant shall claim that no liability existed, defendant shall, to the extent of payment of loss, be subrogated to mortgagee’s rights of recovery, or, defendant may pay off the mortgage debt and require an assignment thereof and of the mortgage; *76 defendant denied liability to plaintiff on grounds that hazard was increased or the house had been vacant' sixty dáys; defendant paid to mortgagee $1,432.80, the amount of mortgage debt, and .the mortgagee transferred the mortgage and debt to defendant; defendant, foreclosed the mortgage and bought in the land for $1,703.01,.which was the amount of mortgage debt plus foreclosure costs; . defendant sold the land to E. E. Mitchell for .$1,200.00; plaintiff subsequently filed suit against defendant on the policy-;- defendant'filed pleas,-in one of- which defendknt alleged -that the policy contained-’the-mortgage- clause above'referred to, ••and-'-fiirther-- "alleged that defendant had paid the -p’roceeds' of the ‘policy to mortgagee,--prior to;Ccómmencément of the first■•> átiit,’ '-hind -that- defendant had thereby discharged-'• defendant’s liability unde-r.'-the policy:;--plaintiff- confessed sai'd plea, and’ judgíneñt'-was-'entered thereon-in fairor of ■ defendant and against plaintiff; the only money defendant» had received in Connection with - the-- transaction ■ was • the $1;200;00 -which- defendant received' from Ei !E.’ Mitchell as purchase price for the property defendant sold to him.

' The agreed statement of facts commences :

“This cause is hereby submitted to the Court for a judgment by the Court on ,.agreed statement of facts without the intervention of a jury.”;

and concludes:

“A true copy of the policy is attached to this agreed statement of fact.
“To this action the defendant filed several pleas, some of which set up and plead res judicata and this cause is submitted to the Court on this agreed statement of facts for the Court to determine if said plea is a good plea and defense to this action for money had and received.”

The next thing in the record is an order of the court which recites certain matters considered by the court and concludes as follows:

' “It is therefore, Ordered, Considered and Adjudged by the Court that defendant’s plea in bar in this case be and the same is hereby overruled, and the plaintiff is allowed to proceed to- trial on the originar'bill of complaint and on defendant’s plea of general issue and such other pleas as defendant may -file within twenty (20) days from the date-of this Order.”

The transcript of evidence on the trial by ,the. jury next appears in the record.. In the trjal by jury,, plaintiff offered in.evi-: dence. the. agreed statement of. facts, but defendant objected and the court sustained the objection.,’

1.

Defendant assigns for error and argues that the trial court erred ún. “o'vfeffilling defendant’s plea (4).”.

We are not familiar with’or-advised of any authorized' procedure 'in this' state whereby, in an action at law, a” court can “.overrule a plea” which has been submitted to the court together with an agreed statement of facts.

As already stated, we do not find in the record any demurrer to the pleas. This court has said that demurrer, and not motion to strike, is the appropriate method of testing the sufficiency of pleas. Logan v. O’Barr, 271 Ala. 94, 97, 122 So.2d 376. We hold, in the instant case, that demurrer is the proper way to test the sufficiency of defendant’s plea 4.

In Alabama and Florida R. Co. v. Watson, 42 Ala. 74, in an action at law, the parties agreed that defendant’s demurrer to the complaint was to be deemed as duly filed and every ground of demurrer which should legally be set down or specified was to be deemed as duly set down and specified. The trial court overruled the demurrer. On appeal, Byrd, J., quoted the statute, which is now § 236 of Title 7, and said:

*77 “. . . . The demurrer, which the -appellant sought to interpose, does not conform to the requirements of the statute, and I am not aware of any authority to sustain the proposition that the agreement of counsel can render nugatory a statutory prohibition which was intended to control the action of the court.
“Again, the record does not inform us what were the points of objection raised in the argument in the court below. And in the absence -of any • information ■ on the subject, I.must presume jn-favor, of the ruling of the court; -that -,no valid ground of demurrer was-specified-in the argument; and if none were,.we should not reverse the case, even. if. there; had been a good one which might have,beep specified. . . :. (42-Ala. at-page 77)

There is' no demurrer to the pleas 'at all in the case at bar.' While Wat-son is not'on all fou'rs with the instant cáse, we think' the following rule stated by Byrd, J., -applies here, to wit:

“. . . . If. parties desire their .causes reviewed they must proceed according to law and the rules of the court to try them, and not under agreements which depart from the provisions of law regulating the trial of causes. . . . .” (42 Ala. at page 78)

Under that rule, we will not reverse the trial court for “overruling” defendant’s plea 4 in the instant case.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
209 So. 2d 212, 282 Ala. 73, 1968 Ala. LEXIS 1088, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-american-fire-and-casualty-co-v-johnson-ala-1968.