Reid v. McElderry
This text of 66 So. 7 (Reid v. McElderry) 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
Appellant sued appellee on the common counts for services rendered and for goods and merchanclise furnished during the year 1912. There was a count also which seemed to proceed as upon an award by arbitrators. Appellee denied any indebtedness and the case was tried by the court below without a jury, the parties by their counsel having agreed that “all technicalities be waived.”
It is clear upon the evidence that appellant could not recover upon the award alleged for the sufficient reason, which appellant’s testimony goes to show, not to mention that of appellee to the same effect, that there Avas no agreement upon arbitrators, nor did the persons Avho assumed to make a statement of the account between the parties, acting evidently under a misapprehension as to their selection for that purpose, clo more than make! a partial statement, that is, they stated that appellee was indebted to appellant in a sum stated, subject to certain credits the amount of which was not stated. This, of course, Avas no award, nor did it tend to establish anything as by legal evidence. We have referred to it, however, as if it were entitled to consideration, for the reason only that appellant appears to rely upon it, and upon the fact that appellee’s son was one of the persons who assumed to make the statement, as greatly persuasive of the moral status of a controversy that Avas tried [152]*152out without regard to technicalities. The investigation was made by these persons without hearing from appellee, and the authority and correctness of its conclusion were by him promptly challenged. The so-called award was in and of itself evidence of nothing, nor did the mutual and well-intended, though mistaken, waiver of .technicalities give it any better standing as an instrument of proof.
Ns for the merits of the controversy, so far as we have been able to extract them from the confusion into which the avoidance of technicality has left the record, they depended in essential part upon the testimony of appellant and appellee. These parties, testifying for themselves, were in conflict, the testimony of each going to sustain his own side of the controversy. The record affords no insight into the credibility of these parties such as the trial judge before whom they testified may have had, and the judgment below might therefore well be sustained on the ground that, so far as we can see, appellant failed to sustain the burden of proof which rested upon him.
Furthermore, the bill of exceptions contains a recital that: “The foregoing was substantially all of the evidence in this case, and all the evidence tended to show, with the exception of certain papers and commissary account book shown by.bill of exceptions to have been offered in evidence.”
The main difference between the parties arose out of the business carrid on at the commissary. The commissary account book was kept by appellant and showed, or should have show, the principal matters of difference between the parties. This state of the record brings into view two closely related considerations either of which affords ample ground for our conclusion not to disturb the judgment under review: (1) The judgment [153]*153of the trial court has the force and effect of a jury finding, and cannot he reversed in the absence of a clear-showing that it is against the great weight of the evidence; (2) the presumption must be indulged that the omitted evidence gave support to the finding of the trial court.—Shafer v. Hausman, 139 Ala. 237, 35 South. 691, an dcases there cited.
Affirmed.
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66 So. 7, 188 Ala. 150, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reid-v-mcelderry-ala-1914.