Selman v. Bryant

72 So. 2d 704, 261 Ala. 53, 1954 Ala. LEXIS 369
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 25, 1954
Docket8 Div. 694
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 72 So. 2d 704 (Selman v. Bryant) 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
Selman v. Bryant, 72 So. 2d 704, 261 Ala. 53, 1954 Ala. LEXIS 369 (Ala. 1954).

Opinions

SIMPSON, Justice.

The bill of complaint sought an accounting between the respondent, Bryant, and the complainant, T. H. Selman, as surviving partner of the firm of W. P. & T. H. Selman, as a result of hundreds of transactions between the parties arising out of the sales of mules to Bryant by the Selman firm. From a final decree complainant has appealed.

The parties had been doing business about seven years and after the death of W. P. Selman, complainant employed a bookkeeper to make an audit of respondent’s account; the respondent disputed the conclusions of the bookkeeper’s audit and this bill was brought, resulting in a finding by the register that the complainant owed the respondent $47,361.32. The complainant and the respondent each filed exceptions to the register’s report; the trial court, excepting one item, upheld the register’s findings and rendered a final decree adjudging complainant to be indebted to the respondent in the amount of $16,220.50. It is from this decree that the complainant has appealed.

The complainant’s exceptions to that portion of the register’s report disallowing certain lost notes amounting to $31,140.83 were sustained by the trial court. The respondent, on cross-appeal, contends that the lower court erred in sustaining said exceptions.

The register’s finding of fact was based on testimony of witnesses orally before him and is, therefore, presumed to be correct. And unless it is against the preponderance of the evidence, it must prevail, and this without regal’d to the decision of the chancellor. So we will review the finding on that basis. Fricke v. City of Guntersville, 257 Ala. 442, 59 So.2d 590.

Where relief is sought, the basis of which is a lost instrument, the one to whose interest it is to establish it must do so by clear and convincing evidence. Bates v. Bates, 247 Ala. 337, 24 So.2d 440.

Testing the evidence by these legal guides, we have concluded that the register’s finding on this point was in error and that the trial court properly sustained the complainant’s exceptions to that portion of the register’s report disallowing the lost notes. We attain this conclusion from the [57]*57following salient facts: The respondent bought mules from the firm of W. P. and T. H. Selman under an arrangement whereby the respondent gave the firm his note for each lot of mules purchased by him. When the respondent sold the mules to farmers, he would receive part payment in money and the balance in customers’ notes payable to the Selman firm; these notes were forwarded to the firm as collateral security. The direct notes given by respondent to the firm in * payment of the mules were described and listed in single entry ledgers and immediately below was a list of the collateral or customers’ notes. After the death of W. P. Selman the complainant, as surviving partner of the Selman firm, employed a bookkeeper and auditor, one J. H. Edge, who began an audit of the respondent’s account. The respondent accepted an invitation to work on this audit and was present when much of the work was done. The account was being examined and the conferences were held in the back room of the old bank building; occasionally Mr. Edge would absent himself from this room, leaving Mr. Bryant, the respondent, alone in the back room with the books and notes. Dr. Selman, father of complainant, testified as to respondent’s suspicious conduct and that on several occasions he looked from the front of the building into the room in which the conferences were being held and noticed that when Mr. Edge would leave the room, respondent would get up, be over at the desk, moving his hands around over the desk and looking toward the front of the building. Mr. Edge testified that the respondent on one occasion asked him to go over the direct notes with him again and it then appeared that some $29,000 of these direct notes were missing. Edge also testified that the respondent said “they must be here some place — they were here the other day.” Mr. Galloway, witness for the complainant and formerly associated in business with the respondent, accompanied respondent to two of these conferences and testified to like effect. In response to respondent’s said statement, Mr. Edge replied “that won’t make much difference, I have them listed .here on the books.” These notes were never found. Mr. Edge made copies of them, which were introduced into evidence. It appears that when Mr. Edge began the examination of the account he made a typewritten statement of every note; this was incorporated in his audit before the notes were missing. When it was discovered the notes were missing, he went to the record of the audit taken from the notes themselves and not from the ledger entries. There was also testimony that the respondent had examined this audit, listing the notes from which Mr. Edge made the copies. Mr. Edge testified that when he began the audit he had in his possession all the notes, including those which were later missing; that he exhibited the notes to the respondent during the time he was making the audit and when the missing notes were not found that he thus made out the duplicate copies. When shown the single entry ledgers, the respondent admitted on the witness stand that they contained a list of his direct notes and that below each direct note was listed the collateral notes representing the sale of the mules for which the direct notes had been given. In answer to a question, the substance of which was if the respondent did not give the allegedly lost notes and if “that was a bogus transaction [entry in thi ledger] all this matter down here below about the sales notes would be bogus, wouldn’t it?” the respondent replied, “Yes.” At this juncture each of the entries of the missing direct notes was pointed out to him and he admitted that he received from the farmers the customers’ or sales notes listed below each direct note. With regard to the missing notes the following questions were propounded to and answered by the respondent at the hearing before the register:

“Q. You won’t say that you didn’t give such notes?' A. I don’t know whether I did or not.”
“Q. You don’t make the positive statement that you did not give them. A. I don’t think I did. * * * ”

The respondent denied, of course, that he took the notes and he also stated 'that no one within his knowledge took them, [58]*58but on the whole evidence we think the trial court correctly ruled in sustaining the complainant’s exceptions in this regard and in allowing the lost notes in the statement of the account.

The appellant argues error on the part of the register in the failure to calculate interest on the direct notes from date until paid, as provided in them.

The appellee first urges in answer to this contention that because of the omission in the complaint of an averment claiming or praying for interest, the appellant was not entitled to it. The bill was for an accounting and for such further relief as complainant might be entitled to. The filing of a bill for accounting implies that there are items on both sides, that the balance is uncertain and that the true amount and to whom due must be ascertained by the court. Grand Bay Land Co. v. Simpson, 205 Ala. 347, 87 So. 186. And technical accuracy in all details is not required in the pleading of a bill for accounting. Dewberry v. Bank of Standing Rock, 227 Ala. 484, 150 So. 463.

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Selman v. Bryant
72 So. 2d 704 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
72 So. 2d 704, 261 Ala. 53, 1954 Ala. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/selman-v-bryant-ala-1954.