Preston Motor Sales Co. v. Preston Motor Corporation
This text of 92 So. 418 (Preston Motor Sales Co. v. Preston Motor Corporation) 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.
Opinion
The Preston Motor Sales Company, a corporation, sues the Preston Motor Corporation, a corporation, for damages growing out of the breach of a contract made by defendant, under the. terms of which plaintiff was to become defendant’s sole sales agent, with exclusive right to sell in a certain territory, during three years, certain motor cars to be manufactured by the defendant, on terms and conditions mentioned in the contract, which is copied in and made part of the count.' There was also a count for money had and received, and a count claiming an amount due by account.
The defendant filed two pleas, numbered 1 and 2. Plea 2 was amended. Each plea was verified by affidavit. The judgment of the court shows demurrers to plea 1 were sustained, and demurrers to plea 2 as amended were overruled. Plaintiff took a nonsuit, with bill of exceptions, on account of the adverse rulings of the court to it on its demurrers to plea 2 as amended. Section 3017, Code 1907.
This first part of said plea is in legal effect a non est factum plea. It denies under oath the execution of the contract with plaintiff. It avers it was made with a partnership, and not with plaintiff, a corporation, as averred in the complaint. The difference between a partnership and a corporation is marked; each having the same name does not make them the same in fact or in law. They arc entirely separate and distinct. The entity of each is different. A contract made by defendant with one, a partnership, could •not be a contract made by defendant -with the other, a corporation, even if both had the same name. Unauthorized change of parties in a contract is a material change in the contract; and that alteration, being material, can be raised by plea of non est fac-tum. Smith v. Hiles, etc., Co., 107 Ala. 272, 18 South. 37; section 5332, Code, and authorities there cited.
“Hence, that at the time this suit was brought there was no such corporation in existence as Preston Motor Sales Company.”
These averments are surplusage, unnecessary, when considered in connection with the non est factnm part of the plea. ■
There is no demurrer to that part of the plea alleging fraud in the organization of the corporation, and in payment for subscriptions of stock; hence it is not necessary for us to decide whether these' aver-ments are sufficient for defendant to base its conclusion that there was no such corporation as plaintiff when this suit was filed.
There is no demurrer that defendant improperly combined in this one plea two pleas, viz. a plea of non est factum and a plea of nul tiel corporation, which would require us to test its sufficiency as a nul tiel corporation plea. Berlin Mach. Wks. v. Ewart Dumber Co., 184 Ala. 272, 63 South. 567.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
92 So. 418, 207 Ala. 177, 1922 Ala. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preston-motor-sales-co-v-preston-motor-corporation-ala-1922.