O'Rear v. Richardson
This text of 81 So. 865 (O'Rear v. Richardson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Several years ago Richardson'sold O’Rear two jennets for $65 cash and a promissory note for like amount due December 1, 1911. We learn this due date from the court’s oral charge, and not from the *88 pleadings, evidence, or briefs of counsel. The [ note not being paid when due, the appellee instituted suit thereon, long after the due date, and the cause coming on to be tried, the defendant alleged that he had been deceived, defrauded, and damaged, because, as he claimed, the plaintiff at the time of the sale “guaranteed” that these two specimens of the equine family were then “in fold” by a horse and would bring forth mule colts, and that the sire fees for the services rendered by the horse had been paid, all of .which the defendant claims was untrue, in that the said animals of feminine gender were then and there more or less impregnated- by a “jack,” and therefore brought.forth “jennet” colts, and, further, that the sire fees were unpaid, but, on the contrary, had to be paid by the defendant, to which, it seems, neither the plaintiff nor the jaek made objection. [
For one time in the history of this court no question is raised in appellant’s brief as to the correctness of the rulings of the trial court.on the pleadings; the bridle seems.to have been taken off the jennets, the jack, and the pleadings as well, and all parties went to it, and the intimate secrets concerning the ambitions and characteristics of the jennets [ [ were ruthlessly exposed by skilled counsel, no doubt to the satisfaction of an impartial judge, an attentive jury, and an interested audience. We would that others may emulate the example of the jennets, and their counsel as well, and remain satisfied that a trial court can sometimes rule on a question of pleading without error.
The case was duly tried, and a jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for $84.45, and, being dissatisfied therewith, and intent, no doubt, upon vindicating his position and contention, the appellant filed a $3,000 appeal bond and comes here for review. The amount of the bond probably indicates the degree of the appellant’s dissatisfaction with the result of the case in the court below.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
81 So. 865, 17 Ala. App. 87, 1919 Ala. App. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orear-v-richardson-alactapp-1919.