Savannah, Americus & Montgomery Railway v. Buford

106 Ala. 303
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 106 Ala. 303 (Savannah, Americus & Montgomery Railway v. Buford) 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
Savannah, Americus & Montgomery Railway v. Buford, 106 Ala. 303 (Ala. 1894).

Opinion

BRICKELL, C. J.

— A corporation must sue and be sued by its proper corporate name ; the name by which it is styled in the law of its creation, or the name which it may have acquired by user. In this respect, the same rules of pleading are applied, which would apply if the suit was by or against a natural person. If the corporation sues or is sued by a wrong name, the only mode of taking advantage of the misnomer, is by a plea in abatement, and if that mode is not resorted to, the error is waived. — 1 Morawetz Corp., § 355 ; Ang. & Ames Corp., [309]*309§ 650 etseq; Smith v. Plank-Road Co., 30 Ala. 650. It is merely elementary to say that the plea must negative the fact that the corporation was known and .called by the name by which it sues or is sued, and must aver its true, real name, the name by which it may rightfully sue or be sued. This is of the essence of all such pleas, otherwise the plaintiff -would not be furnished with the means of correcting the .error — in the language of the old books a better writ would not be given him, and there might be repetition of such pleas, to the delay of justice and the multiplication of costs.

The plea is formally and accurately drawn. It negatives the fact that the defendant was ever known and called by the name of'the “Savannah, Americus & Montgomery Railroad Company,” the name by which it was sued, and avers that its true and real corporate name, is the “Savannah, Americus & Montgomery Railway.” The causes of demurrer to the plea which were assigned, if any were assigned, are not shown by the record. It is probable, the demurrer was sustained upon the theory that there was not a substantia] variance between the name by which the defendant was sued, and that which was averred in the plea as to the true name. Whether this is true or not, is not now a matter of importance. The complaint was amended by the insertion of the true corporate name, as it was expressed in the plea, and if there was error in sustaining the demurrer to the plea, the amendment rendered it harmless. If the demurrer had been overruled, the result would have been to put the plaintiff to the necessity of an , amendment. — Ala. Conference v. Price, 42 Ala. 39 ; Smith v. Plank-Road Co., 30 Ala. 650, supra; Caldwell v. Bank, 11 Ala. 549.

The statutes of amendment are very broad; they are remedial, and have received a liberal construction. — Code, §§ 2691, 2833. The purpose of the statutes is to promote speedy trials on the merits, and to save the delay and injury incident to the common law rules of procedure, by which errors in pleading were often fatal, compelling the institution of a new suit. The right of amendment is now co-extensive with the errors in pleading which may be committed. There are, however, certain rules which must be observed, and certain limita which can not be transcended. The form of action may not be changed; there can not be an entire change of [310]*310the cause of action, nor an entire change of parties plaintiff or defendant. Either of these things, would be the equivalent of the institution of a new suit, rather than the correction of defects or errors of pleading in the suit which was pending. It seems to us, it is quite an error to suppose that the mere change of the name of a party, natural or artificial, though such party may be a sole plaintiff or defendant, can be an entire change of parties. It was very properly observed in Smith v. Plank-Road Co., 30 Ala. 650, supra, in which there was by amendment a correction of a misnomer of a corporation, the sole party plaintiff, ‘ ‘that there is a well marked distinction between a misnomer, which incorrectly names a corporation, but correctly describes it, and the statement in the pleading of an entirely different party.” And it is upon this distinction, rests the cáse of Western Railway v. McCall, 89 Ala. 375, to which we are referred. There was in that case more than a mere misnomer; there was an incorrect description of the corporation. To the misnomer there was added the descriptive averment that the corporation sued was “a foreign corporation, incorporated under the law of the State of Georgia, and doing business by its agents in said county of Lowndes, State of Alabama.” The amendment of the complaint proposed was. the striking out the original name, and the descriptive averment, inserting in lieu a new name, and describing the defendant as a domestic corporation; a corporation incorporated under the law of this State. The court observed : “The departure in this case is so radical — a substitution of an Alabama corporation, having an expressed name, for a Georgia corporation, having another and distinctly different name — that we feel bound to hold that it is a change of the sole party defendant.” The later case of Singer Manufacturing Co. v. Greenleaf, 100 Ala. 272, is of more analogy to the present case. The corporation was sued by a wrong name ; by the name of the “Singer Machine Company,” the true name being the “Singer Manufacturing Company.” The correction of the misnomer by amendment of the complaint was decided to be proper. The court said: “There was not an entire change of party, but only a correction of a part of the corporate name, which had been misconceived. We do not think the change was calculated to deceive or mislead.” In the case of [311]*311Caldwell v Branch Bank of Mobile, 11 Ala. 549, a case occurring before our present statute, when the right of amendment was more circumscribed, the original writ described the plaintiff as the “Branch Bank at Mobile,” the true corporate name being the “Branch of the Bank of the State of Alabama at Mobile.” The declaration was filed in the true corporate name, but the variance between the writ and the declaration was pleaded in abatement, and to the plea a demurrer was sustained. The court said: “The name of the plaintiff, it is believed, is substantially the same both in the writ and the declaration, and this is considered sufficient. But if the variance is material, we think the.fair inference is, that the name of the plaintiff in the writ was intended to be the same as that stated in the declaration according to the act of incorporation; that the writ may be amended on motion, and the mistake is no ground for abatement.” We cannot doubt the amendment of the complaint was properly allowed.

There was no error in the rejection as evidence of the value of the lands of the plaintiff, the assessments of the lands for taxation. The plaintiff did not participate in the assessments, each assessment was the act of the assessor. — Birmingham Mineral R. R. Co. v. Smith, 89 Ala. 305 ; Ala. Mineral Land Co. v. County Commissioners, 95 Ala. 105. The subsequent payment of the taxes as assessed, was a ratification of the act of the assessor so far as all the matter of'taxation was involved ; beyond that the ratification did not extend, and it cannot be extended so as to convert it into an admission by the plaintiff that it equalled or exceeded the value of the lauds, when the fact of value is involved . in a controversy with a stranger.

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Bluebook (online)
106 Ala. 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savannah-americus-montgomery-railway-v-buford-ala-1894.