Phillips v. Birmingham Industrial Co.

60 So. 896, 180 Ala. 311, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 353
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 23, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 60 So. 896 (Phillips v. Birmingham Industrial Co.) 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
Phillips v. Birmingham Industrial Co., 60 So. 896, 180 Ala. 311, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 353 (Ala. 1913).

Opinion

MAYFIELD, J.

This suit is for an accounting. It was brought by a principal against his agent. This is the third appeal; the other appeals being reported in 161 Ala. 509, 50 South. 77, 135 Am. St. Rep. 156, and 172 Ala. 168, 55 South. 298. The first appeal sustained the equity of the bill. The second was a mandamus proceeding against the chancellor to compel him to set aside and annul certain interlocutory orders and decrees made by him. The application for mandamus was denied, and the cause proceeded to a final decree, which was in favor of complainant, and decreed the relief prayed, and ascertained and decreed the respondent to be due the complainant $2,957.74, with interest. A great number of exceptions were reversed to the register’s report, and were overruled by the chancellor, and the register’s report was affirmed; and from that final decree, the respondent prosecutes this appeal.

The respondent never answered the bill further than to file eight special and separate pleas, none of which were ever tested by being set down for hearing on their sufficiency; but the case was submitted, over the protest of respondent, on the bill, the pleas, and the evidence taken, and an accounting was ordered, had, and affirmed, as will appear from the report of' the case in 172 Ala. 108, 55 South'. 298. Some of these pleas were bad, and some not intelligible; but others were certainly good defenses and went to the equity of [313]*313the bill, while still others were good defenses pro tanto —this is, to a part of the bill.

Section 3115 of the Code provides that: “A defendant may incorporate all matters of defense in his answer, and is not required to plead specially in any case, but shall not take or have any advantage by pleading or proving an immaterial, irrelevant, insufficient, or untrue plea, and the complainant is not required to test the sufficiency of any such plea, or to move to strike it, and if his bill contains equity and is proved, he shall have the appropriate relief, notwithstanding any such special plea may have been pleaded and proved.” This section, as last amended, was intended to change the rule, as decided in the case of Tyson v. Decatur Land Co., 121 Ala. 418, 26 South. 507, that taking issue on an immaterial plea in chancery was attended with the same effect as in a court of law. The statute now provides in terms that the complainant is not required to test the sufficiency of the pleas, nor to move to strike them; but, if the bill contains equity and is proven, he shall have the appropriate relief, notwithstanding an immaterial plea may have been pleaded and proven. Of course, as the statute expressly declares, the bill must contain equity and must be proven to entitle the complainant to relief. The statute, of course, does not change the rule as to sufficient pleas, but only as to insufficient ones. If a good plea is interposed, whether separately or as a part of an answer, and it is proven, the complainant, of course, must fail now, as he always did, when a good and sufficient plea is interposed and proven.

The equity of the bill was sustained on the first appeal upon the ground that it alleged a fiduciary relation between the principal and the agent, and failure and refusal on the part of the agent to account. It is there [314]*314said: “The hill alleges that the defendant, in flagrant disregard of the obligations of the trust assumed by him, had procured the removal from the premises of all of the old cotton seed; that he had done all in his power to thwart the efforts of complainant to put the land in cultivation during the current year at the time of the filing of the bill (June 20, 1908), and had failed and refused to render an account of his stewardship, the details of which rest entirely within the knowledge of the defendant.” Plea 2 was as follows: “That on the 21st day of November, 1907, the defendant furnished to complainant an itemized statement of the account between the parties, growing out of said contract relations, and since that time complainant had not requested any further accounting.” Plea 4 was as follows: “The defendant for further plea says that on, to wit, the 7th of December, 1907, the defendant was notified by the complainant that Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Eborn, of Birmingham, Ala., had purchased and taken over all the crops grown on the 850 acres of land in Russell county, Ala., purchased from the defendant by the Birmingham Industrial Company by deed dated June 12, 1907, and that the Eborns had assumed all engagements relating thereto, and were entitled to all the benefits therefrom under existing agreements, and further that the said Eborns were placed in possession of said properties for utilization another year and for their own account; and defendant avers that all relations of principal and agent were thereby ended between complainant and defendant.” Plea 8 was as follows: “For further plea, the defendant says that before the filing of the bill in this cause, and before the defendant had gathered the crops on said farm, the complainant gave the defendant the following notice in writing: ‘You are notified that Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Eborn of this city [315]*315liave purchased and taken over all the crops grown on the 850 acres of land in Russell county, Ala., purchased of you by deed dated January 12, 1907, and they have assumed all engagements relating thereto, and are entitled to all the benefits therefrom under existing agreements, and further they are placed in possesion of said properties for utilization another year and for their own account. The president of this company instructed Mr. Prince, the superintendent, to proceed to gather in the cotton and crops, and to hold it on the place for further orders. Further under no circumstances to allow anything to be taken off the place or marketed. You have taken the entire crops up to that time, gathered, marketed the same in plain violation of your contract with this company, and appropriated the proceeds to your own account, without authority. You have been called on and promised to give statement of account for advances which you have never done.’ Defendant avers that said notice of transfer and assignment covered the demand for which an accounting is sought in the bill, and that, since notice was so given to defendant, the defendant had not, at any time prior to the filing of the bill, been requested to account with the complainant.” These pleas went to the equity of the bill; and, if proven (and we find that they were), the complainant was not entitled to the relief prayed, nor to that decreed.

The pleas denied that the respondent had failed to give an accounting of his “stewardship,” the main equity of the bill. They alleged that on a given date the agent rendered unto the principal an itemized statement of his “stewardship,” and that, after that date, no further accounting had ever been requested, and that, soon after or just before the date of rendering the account, the principal, by employing another agent to do what the respondent had engaged to do, and instruct[316]*316ing said other agent to receive and to obey no further instructions from the respondent, and selling the farm and the crops the subject of the stewardship, and placing the vendees in possession thereof, had rendered it impossible for the repondent to further carry out the agreement, the sole basis of the right to an accounting.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 So. 896, 180 Ala. 311, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-birmingham-industrial-co-ala-1913.