S. A. Williams & Co. v. Newman
This text of 87 So. 807 (S. A. Williams & Co. v. Newman) 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
Appellees sued appellant company, declaring on the common counts. Questions for review were reserved when the trial court sustained plaintiffs’ demurrers to special pleas numbered. 3, 4, and 6.
Plaintiffs’ 'claim was for the price or value of 12 coats shipped by plaintiffs at New York to defendant at Birmingham; but, upon receipt of the goods, they had been returned by express to plaintiffs, and some of them had been lost in transit. The real controversy was about the goods that were lost, and defendant’s effort in pleas 3 and 6 was to show that the express company was the agent of plaintiffs.
The species of estoppel here invoked— quasi estoppel, it is commonly called — rests upon the principle that where a person has, with knowledge of the facts, asserted a particular claim, title, or right, he cannot after-wards assume a position inconsistent with such claim, title, or right, to the prejudice of another. 16 Oyc. 785, where many cases are cited. Eor aught we can see, bearing in mind the cónfession of the plea, defendant, as against plaintiffs, had no right to rely upon plaintiffs’ claim against the carrier, nor does the plea disclose for what, to what end, or with what effect prejudicial to defendant, the latter relied on plaintiffs’ claim. As for plea 6, it does not appear that the alleged agreement was a contract supported by consideration; it must therefore be treated on demurrer as the mere mutual assent to the proposition that the carrier was the agent of plaintiffs, not true, as the plea confessed, and as to which the plea alleged nothing beyond its confession. As in the case of plea 4, it is not made to appear that plaintiffs’ affidavit, though prepared, was used to any effect, or at all. Still' bearing in mind the confession of the plea, we are unable to see that the mere preparation, of the affidavit furnished any reason why defendant should not have claimed of the carrier compensation for the coats that were lost nor does the plea show how or in what manner defendant has been prejudiced by his forbearance to make a claim against the carrier for said coats. Non constat, defendant may yet assert its rightful claim against the carrier.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
87 So. 807, 205 Ala. 86, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-a-williams-co-v-newman-ala-1920.