Marx Bros. v. Leinkauff

93 Ala. 453
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 93 Ala. 453 (Marx Bros. v. Leinkauff) 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
Marx Bros. v. Leinkauff, 93 Ala. 453 (Ala. 1890).

Opinion

COLEMAN, J.

— Special averments are necessary to let in' evidence for the recovery of special damages, but such special damages must be the natural and proximate result of the wrong in order to authorize their recovery. The averments must also be of such character, if sustained by proof, as to. furnish data from which the damages may be calculated with reasonable certainty. If the damages be speculative, or too-remote, neither averment nor proof will authorize their recovery. Loss of credit and business are the natural consequences. [461]*461of suing out an attachment against a merchant on account of fraud, and may be averred in the complaint.— Goldsmith v. Picard, 27 Ala. 149; Donnell v. Jones, 13 Ala. 490; Flournoy v. Lyon & Co., 70 Ala. 313.

In the case of Pollock & Co. v. Gantt, 69 Ala. 378, it was held, that “good or bad credit -was a conclusion of fact, partly based on opinion and judgment, founded more or less on reputation; that it was a collective fact, made up of many known ingredients. That a witness could speak of credit as a fact, and its extent, but not of its value in dollars and cents.”. A merchant’s general credit could not be established by proof that two or more named persons were willing to extend to.him credit; neither could it be shown that his credit was injured because simply two or three particular persons refused him credit. Business relations may be contracted or interrupted by many considerations not dependent upon the question of credit or ability to pay, and it would be unsafe to declare as a rule that the credit of a merchant, or its loss, are dependent upon his sustaining such a relation to two or three named customers.

In the case from 69 Ala. supra, evidence was introduced that Gantt was a general merchant, and among his customers were timber men whose trade he lost by reason of the attachment. This court held, there, were no averments in the complaint to authorize the introduction of such evidence, and if there had been, the damages claimed on this account were too remote and speculative. The damages resulting -irom loss of credit so that plaintiffs could not borrow money from Pollock & Go., or Levy, and Levy & Go., were too remote and speculative, and there was no error in sustaining the demurrer to this part of the complaint-

indebtedness, or even insolvency, alone, will not justify the suing out of an attachment, but these questions sometimes become important in determining the Iona, fides of the disposition of goods; and “if'the question be one of fraudj whatever fact tends to show the good or bad faith of the party throughout the whole transaction, is properly admissible in evidence.” — Durr v. Jackson, 59 Ala. 203. While plaintiff was a witness i# his own behalf, on the cross-examination, it was entirely competent for the defendants to interrogate him on material matters in regard to which he had testified in his deposition taken by defendants under the statute authorizing the examination of parties. The defendants could not offer a part of the deposition in evidence without offering the whole; but the fact of having taken this deposition did not require the defendants to offer it in evidence, and .the answer-of the witness on cross-examination might determine the ad[462]*462vantage or necessity for using the deposition on the trial. Code. § 2818.

Portions of the testimony of the witness Glennon were objected to, on the grounds that it was “irrelevant and immaterial.” We think it was both relevant and material to show the value of the goods attached, and an auctioneer who had sold stocks of goods in Mobile for twenty years was competent to testify that the goods of plaintiffs, sold by him at auction, brought a fair price under the circumstances. The extent of his knowledge of the character of the goods, was a matter of cross-examination and argument to the jury. — Jefferson Co. Sav. Bank v. Eborn, 84 Ala. 535.

It was competent to prove by the witness Sheurman, or Sherman (the spelling occurs both ways in the bill of exceptions), that he bought shoes from the plaintiffs, and, after refreshing his' memory as he did as to the price paid, to testify to the price paid for them to plaintiffs. It was also competent for the witness to testify that he pointed these shoes out to the witness Jacobs. These are facts. It was also competent for the Witness Jacobs to testify that he saw shoes in the store of Sherman, which were pointed out to him by Sherman, and he recognized and identified them as shoes sold by his firm to plaintiffs, and to further testify 'as to the cost price at which they were sold to plaintiffs. In this way the shoes could be identified, and the price paid by plaintiffs for them, and the price at''which plaintiffs sold to Sherman, could be ascertained. But it was not competent to prove by the witness Sherman that he paid eighty cents for the shoes, by a statement to that effect to Jacobs, made in the absence of plaintiffs, and then to permit the witness Jacobs to testify to such a statement. A party can not strengthen his own testimony, by introducing evidence' that he made the same statement at other times to different persons. ' Such evidence may be admissible to impeach or’ contradict, but not to corroborate.— Western Asso. Co. v. Stoddard, 88 Ala. 614. If it was necessary in order to fix in the mind of thé witness Jacobs the particular lot of shoes interrogated about, to call his attention to the statement made at the time as to the price paid, for this purpose only, that of identification, such statement was admissible, but not as proof of the price paid.

We find no other error in the record as to the rulings of the court upon' the admission of testimony.

The dourt instructed the jury, “If you believe that Marx Bros, sold' goods to Marx of Mississippi, and that at that time the debt to Olaflin & Go.' existed, this fact, together with the fact of 'the relationship of the parties, may be- looked to as á [463]*463fact from which fraud might be presumed.” When a conveyance of property is attached as fraudulent, by creditors whose debts were in existence prior to the date of the conveyance of the property, the burden to show that a valuable and adequate consideration was paid for the property rests upon the purchaser ; and when the transaction of sale or purchase is between near relatives, clearer and more conclusive proof is required of the consideration paid and of the bona fieles of the transaction. The relationship does not raise the presumption o,f fraud, is not a badge of fraud in itself, neither does it impose upon the purchaser the burden of proof to show the bona fides of the transaction. The fact that plaintiffs’ debt against the vendor existed prior to the conveyance places the burden of proof upon the purchaser, and, if he be a near relative, the transaction will be more closely scrutinized, and clearer proof will be required to remove the burden, than if the parties were strangers. — Hubbard v. Allen, 59 Ala. 301, 297; Gordon v. McIlwain, 82 Ala. 252; Pollock v. Searcy, 84 Ala. 263; Moog v. Farley, 79 Ala. 252; Apfel v. Crane, 83 Ala. 312; Galhoun v. Hannon, 87 Ala. 284.

Cases in which this principle has usually been applied were where the attacking creditor sought to reach the property conveyed, or by process of the writ of garnishment reach a debt due the defendant debtor. The ’property sold to the brother Lee EL Marx was not attached, neither • was he garnisheed.

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Bluebook (online)
93 Ala. 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marx-bros-v-leinkauff-ala-1890.