Pocahontas Graphite Co. v. Minerals Separation North American Corp.

109 So. 873, 215 Ala. 225, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 339
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 14, 1926
Docket7 Div. 561.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 109 So. 873 (Pocahontas Graphite Co. v. Minerals Separation North American Corp.) 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
Pocahontas Graphite Co. v. Minerals Separation North American Corp., 109 So. 873, 215 Ala. 225, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 339 (Ala. 1926).

Opinion

MILLER, J.

This is an action of detinue-by the Minerals Separation North American Corporation, a corporation, against Pocahontas Graphite Company, a corporation, for one 18-inch 10-cell Mineral Separation flotation machine, and for one 12-inch 10-eell Mineral Separation flotation machine, with the value of hire or use thereof during the detention.

There was judgment for the plaintiff based on a verdict of the jury, and from it this .appeal is prosecuted by the defendant.

The defendant insists the court erred in not continuing the case, because the defendant presented “a certificate of the pending of a petition in bankruptcy of defendant” to the court on October 9, 1924. The bill of exceptions recites: “Thereupon the defendant suggested the 'bankruptcy of the defendant,” and the court stated: “I rather think the suit could be maintained.” We find no exception to this ruling of the court. The. parties agree in writing that there was presented to the trial court a certified copy of the involuntary petition in bankruptcy against the defendant, with a copy of notice thereof to the defendant, and copy of return of the United States marshal, as having served it on the president of defendant, on October 17, 1923.

This suit was commenced on the 26th of *227 July, 1919. The petition in bankruptcy was filed and notice thereof was issued to the defendant on September 25, 1923, for him to appear and answer it on October 21,1923.

This is a suit in detinue and had been pending for over four years before this petition in bankruptcy was filed. This plaintiff is claiming the property. There is nothing in the record to show whether the defendant was adjudicated a bankrupt, or whether the petition was dismissed and denied, or whether it was still pending and undetermined.

The burden was on the defendant to make proof of the exact situation of the proceedings in the bankruptcy cause. This it failed to do. Under the foregoing circumstances, the court will not be placed in error for refusing to continue the case. In the cases of Brown, Webb Co. v. Southern Woodenware Co., 210 Ala. 505, 98 So. 560, and Brown, Webb Co. v. Edward Rose & Co., 210 Ala. 488, 98 So. 559, there was proof that the defendant had been adjudicated a bankrupt, and the proceedings were still pending, and no decree discharging the bankrupt had been entered, and the suit was for a debt claimed to be due by the bankrupt. In Young & Co, v. Howe, 150 Ala. 157, 43 So. 488, there w'as a plea of discharge of the debt in bankruptcy and the plea was “admitted by demurrer and replication.”

The defendant pleaded: First, General issue. Second, The plaintiff’s title to the property is derived from a contract entered into between plaintiff and defendant on the 13th of December, 1918, and the contract was and is without consideration. And pleas 3, A, B, and O set up that plaintiff claims title to the property under a contract entered into between the parties — -plaintiff and defendant - — and the contract was made in the state of Alabama; and the property at the time of the execution of the contract was in Alabama ; and the plaintiff was at the time a foreign corporation, and was not qualified to do business in this state — because the plaintiff had not complied with section 232 of the Constitution of Alabama and with sections 3642 and 3C13 of the Code of 1907. The court sustained demurrers to these pleas'3, A, B, and C.

The appellant insists the court erred in each of these rulings for this, and probably other reasons: The grounds of demurrer to each were general. If the court erred in these rulings, which we need not decide, it was without injury to the substantial rights of the defendant. There was proof of the averments in the pleas, and this issue was allowed by the court to be presented under the general issue plea by the defendant by the testimony. Rule 45 of this court.

The court permitted the" plaintiff to introduce in evidence, and read to the jury over the objection of the defendant, a contract entered into by the parties on December 13, 1918, in regard to this property. Appellant insists the copy was irrelevant, as the original was not accounted for, and that the original was the best evidence.

The judgment of the court recites:

“Upon the plaintiff’s filing motion for judgment by default for evasive answer of defendant to plaintiff’s interrogatories propounded to it, defendant admits the execution of the contract inquired about in said plaintiff’s interrogatories.”

The contract inquired about was this one dated December 13, 1918, which was read to the jury.

The bill of exceptions states:

“The defendant admitted in supplement to the answers to plaintiff’s interrogatories that it executed the lease contract bearing date December 13, 1918, and shown on page-, bill of exceptions.”

The only contract appearing in the bill of exceptions dated December 13, 1918, is the one objected to by the defendant, and which was read to the jury." Plea 2 of the defendant avers the execution of this contract, that plaintiff claims title to this property under it, and that it is without consideration.

So under the foregoing admissions in open court by the defendant, shown by the minutes of the court and the bill of exceptions and under plea 2 of the defendant, the court did not err in admitting this contract in evidence.

There is ho contention or suggestion that it is not an exact copy of the original. Rule 45 of this court. The evidence shows that when this contract was executed, the property and the parties were in this state, and the property was in possession of the defendant, that plaintiff was and is a foreign corporation and was not qualified to do business in this state because it had not complied with the Constitution and statutory requirements mentioned herein. The appellant insists this rendered the contract void and inadmissible in this cause. This may have rendered this contract void; but this we need not and do not decide. Section 232 of the Constitution; sections 3642 to 3646 of the Code of 1907; Cable Piano Co. v. Estes, 206 Ala. 95, 89 So. 372. Still, it was admissible in evidence. It contained competent evidence. It contained a written declaration by the defendant that this property was owned by the plaintiff and not by the defendant; that the plaintiff was lessor and the defendant the lessee; and that defendant could purchase it from the plaintiff. The defendant thereby, in writing, admitted the title to the machines was in the plaintiff, which was a vital issue between the parties in this cause.

The court gave, at the request of the. plaintiff, the general affirmative charge, with hypothesis in its favor and refused to defendant a -similar written charge in its favor.

The evidence for plaintiff showed that the defendant, in writing, requested of plaintiff at its New York office prices for this property. *228 The plaintiff from its office in California-wired defendant the prices for the two machines; and the defendant wired plaintiff’s agent in California as follows:

“Enter onr order for ten standard gear driven eighteen inch roughing cells and ten standard gear driven twelve inch cleaners as per telegram May twenty-eighth.”

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Bluebook (online)
109 So. 873, 215 Ala. 225, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pocahontas-graphite-co-v-minerals-separation-north-american-corp-ala-1926.