Pharr v. Bachelor

3 Ala. 237
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 3 Ala. 237 (Pharr v. Bachelor) 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
Pharr v. Bachelor, 3 Ala. 237 (Ala. 1841).

Opinion

COLLIER, C. J.

It is objected to the declaration, that the ■first count is in case, and the second in assumpsit; and it is therefore insisted, that the demurrer should have been sustained for a misjoinder. The first count, after setting out a parol contract and breach,"concludes as a declaration in case, and the conclusion, it is insisted, must determine its character. This argument cannot be maintained. If the conclusion of the count' •was stricken out, it would be good in assumpsit; and it may therefore be rejected as surplusage. No other objection is made to the first count, nor indeed can, on general demurrer, as the second count, is confessedly good.

It has been repeatedly adjudged, that a party who introduces no evidence upon a trial before the jury, as a matter of right, may demur to the evidence of his adversary ; the more especially if the evidence demurred to, is not “ loose, indefinite or circumstantial.” Such was the decision of this Court in Alexander v. Fitzpatrick, 4 Porters Rep. 405. A demurrer to the evidence admits the truth of the facts proved, together with the conclusions fairly inferrible therefrom, arid asks the judgment of the Court as to their legal effect. As it is the office of the jury to ascertain the facts, and determine what is proved, if these are admitted upon the record, the cause may be withdrawn from them, and the question of law arising upon [243]*243the admission, decided by the Court. Such is the purpose and effect of a demurrer to the evidence.

The law, as we have stated it, is not denied by the defendant in error, but it is insisted that the demurrer tendered, does •not distinctly admit on the record, the truth of all the facts offered in evidence, and of every conclusion which the facts conduce to prove. The demurrer explicitly admits “ every word, figure and statement,” of the evidence which is set out in ex-tenso, “to be true,” — it also admits “every conclusion that may be reasonably drawn therefrom, to be true,” and refers in usual form, the legal questions to the Court. This is certainly sufficient, unless there be something in the case to show, that the demurrer is not adapted to it. The Circuit Judge states upon the record, that the demurrer truly set forth all the material evidence in the cause, but that the Court refused to compel a joinder, because the demurrer itself was deemed insufficient.

Tn Copeland v. New Eng. Ins. Co. 22 Pick. Rep. 135, the Court considered that where the evidence consists of written documents, or of direct positive testimony of witnesses, it may be demurred to, by stating it as it was submitted to the jury, and admitting its truth, as well as the conclusions fairly infer-rible from it. “But where the evidence is circumstantial or uncertain, leaving much to inference and presumption,” the Court say, “ it is not easy or safe to frame a demurrer upon it, or a rejoinder thereto. It will not be sufficient to demur to the evidence generally, and leave to the Court to ascertain what it tends to prove, or what inferences may be drawn from it. But in reciting the evidence in the demurrer, the party demurring must state distinctly the facts which the evidence tends to prove, and which he thereby admits, that the Court may readily perceive the facts upon which they are to decide.” Conceding that the law is correctly laid down in the case cited, and still the demurrer is sufficient. The evidence is direct and positive, and it is quite enough, after reciting it, to admit its truth as well as the conclusion deducible from it, without undertaking to particularize the facts and conclusions which are admitted.

We will not stop to inquire, whether the demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained, or whether its rejection, if it were not sustainable, would authorise a reversal of the judgment. Alexander v. Fitzpatrick, 4 Porter’s Rep. 409.— [244]*244Other and more important questions, which arise in the cause, are decisive of its fate here.

In an action upon a verbal contract, time is considered in general as forming no material part of the issue; it is therefore allowable for the pleader to assign one time to a given fact, and prove another. But to tolerate this discrepancy between the allegation and the proof, he should lay the time under a videlicet, and take care that he do not lay a time that is intrinsically impossible, or inconsistent with the fact to which it relates. Step. on Plead. 292; 2 Phil. Ev. C. & H. ed. 533. In the present case, the declaration states the time when the contract was made thus, “heretofore, to wit: on the 19th day of July,” &c. According to the law', as we have cited it, from very eminent elementary vfriters, this mode of pleading does not oblige the pleader to show, that the contract was made on the day alleged.

The Circuit Court, in the instructions to the jury, employs this language: “ that if a recovery by the plaintiff on the first count in his declaration, would be a bardo a second suit on the same cause, the special contract mentioned in said first count, is substantially' proved.” The conclusion of this charge is clearly a nonsequitur from the premises laid down — it deduces a conclusion of fact from a question of law, and while the Court decides the fact hypothetically, it refers the law to the decision of the jury. To be more precise, the jury are directed to inquire, whether a recovery upon the first count would bar another action for the cause embraced by it, and if it would, the Court says the ‘ special contract, “ is substantially proved.” This instruction cannot be sustained, for it is erroneous in itself, as well as for the additional reason, that it makes the jury judges of law. We should have been inclined to think itpro-pable, that the bill of exceptions was not correctly transcribed into the record, if a bill, in all respects similar to that accompanying the writ .of error, had not been sent'up in answer to a certiorari.

In pleading, the legal effect and identity of the contract should be stated, and any variance in this respect, relating to the prorhise or undertaking upon which the action is predicated, or the consideration thereof, will be fatal; but where a party agrees to do several things, though the declaration describe [245]*245the contract at length, yet if it allege a breach, applying only to some one of the stipulations, the plaintiff’s proof should be confined to the breach stated. Where a declaration contains impertinent matter, foreign to the cause, it need not be proved; but the same remark is not universally true of immaterial aver-ments. “An immaterial averment is one, alleging with needless particularity or unnecessary circumstances, what is material and necessary, and which might properly have been stated more generally, and without such circumstances or particulars; or mother words, it is a statement of unnecessary particulars in connection with, and as descriptive of what is material.” Gould’s Plead. 160, et post. “The rule, as limited by the more modem authorities,” says Judge Gould, appears to be, that no immaterial averment requires precise proof, unless the failure of such proof would occasion a variance between the pleading and the proof: or (in different language) strict proof of such averment is not at this day necessary, unless the subject of the averment is a record — a written instrument, or as I conceive, an express contract. Inasmuch as these are in strictness, the only subjects of variance, (properly so called) when the mistake in the pleading is in a point not in itself material. Gould’s Plead. 164.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ala. 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pharr-v-bachelor-ala-1841.