Shreve-Milligan Live Stock & Vehicle Co. v. Pelham

60 So. 516, 6 Ala. App. 262, 1912 Ala. App. LEXIS 69
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 60 So. 516 (Shreve-Milligan Live Stock & Vehicle Co. v. Pelham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shreve-Milligan Live Stock & Vehicle Co. v. Pelham, 60 So. 516, 6 Ala. App. 262, 1912 Ala. App. LEXIS 69 (Ala. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

WALKER, P. J.

The appeal is from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for part of the property sued for in a statutory action of detinue, entered upon a verdict in his favor on the trial of an issue made up be[264]*264tween him and the appellant, which had claimed the property in the manner provided by the statute (Code § 3792) for the interposition of such a claim by one not a party to the suit. The -plaintiff’s asserted right to the property was dependent upon the validity of a claim by him that he had repurchased it from one B. B. Layton, to whom, according to his own testimony, he had previously sold and delivered it. Prior to the transaction of the plaintiff with Layton, the property had belonged to Waters and Davis, who still claimed to own part of it and to have a mortgage on the rest of it. After the plaintiff’s sale to Layton, the property, Avhich was in the state of Florida at that time, was levied on under process in two suits brought in that state by Waters and Davis. The plaintiff’s evidence Avas to the effect that it Avas when the matter was in this situation that he reacquired the property from Lay-ton, Avho demanded of the plaintiff either a return of the money Avhich had been paid to him for the property, or that the adverse claim to it asserted by Waters and Davis be cleared up. The evidence for the claimant tended to prove that the transaction between the plaintiff and Layton amounted to no more than the making of an offer by Layton to resell to the plaintiff at a stated cash price, and an unsuccessful effort by the plaintiff to pay the price asked; that, in consequence of the plaintiff’s failure to make such payment in full, he did not reacquire the right or title then vested in Lay-ton, who thereupon acquired the claims of Waters and Davis, procured the dismissal by them of the two suits, took possession of the property, brought it to Alabama, and then sold it to Waters and Davis, Avho in turn sold it to the claimant.

• The plaintiff was permitted, without objection, to testify as to the institution and pendency of the two [265]*265suits brought by Waters and Davis. This evidence was explanatory of transactions upon which the plaintiff and the claimant respectively relied, in so far as it discloses the situation with reference to which Laytoh acted, whether he resold to the plaintiff, as claimed by the latter, or had the dealings with Waters and Davis, Avhich the evidence for the claimant tended to prove. Further than this, inquiries as to the bringing, pendency, and disposition of those suits, or as to the efficacy or regularity of the proceedings in them, or the motives or purposes of the actors therein in instituting and then abandoning them, were in reference to matters having no bearing upon the question presented in this proceeding as to whether the plaintiff or the claimant is entitled to the property which is in contest. Nothing-done in those suits could have had any effect upon the right or claim of either the plaintiff or the claimant to the property now in dispute. • The claimant asserted no right by virtue of those suits or of any proceeding had in them. Waters and Davis, under whom it claimed, did not strengthn or impair any right they may have had to the property by merely instituting suits which were not prosecuted to judgment. On the other hand, AAdiatever right the plaintiff may have to the property he is claiming in this suit is the same as it Avould have been if those suits had never been brought. The court, over objections interposed by the claimant, permitted the plaintiff to introduce much evidence as to the history of those suits and as to incidents connected with them, and to thus raise questions in reference to them Avhich, as above stated, are not regarded as being material or relevant in this proceeding. - We are of opinion that error was committed in the admission of such evidence.

[266]*266According to the testimony of the plaintiff, when he came to Alabama after the removal of the property to this state, he found it in the possession of one Shreve, the defendant in this suit, and an officer of the claimant company, and demanded it of him. Over objections of the claimant, the plaintiff was permitted to testify that after this demand was made Shreve stated to him, in reference to a conversation over the telephone ■which he had about the matter with Davis, a member of the firm from Avhich the claimant claimed that it purchased the property, that Davis told him to hold the property, and that Shreve said he would not give bond for the property unless Water and Davis indemnified him. We are unable to discover any ground upon which this testimony can be' regarded as material or relevant. There could be nothing to affect or impair the validity of the claimant’s asserted right to the property in the circumstances that it or its agent, when informed of the plaintiff’s adverse claim to it, on communicating with the firm from which it claimed to have purchased the property, was told by a member of that.firm to hold it, and that the claimant’s agent indicated an unwillingness to incur responsibility or expense to retain possession of the property unless indemnified by the seller of it. In the circumstances disclosed, neither of these incidents could shed any possible light upon the question as to whether the plaintiff or the claimant was entitled to the property. The evidence might well be made the basis of an improper appeal to the jury to look unfavorably upon an alleged purchaser’s claim to property because, when its right to it was questioned by a third party, it or its agent communicated with the seller and indicated a purpose to invoke his protection against the adverse claim. The objections to this testimony should have been sustained.

[267]*267The claimant was not originally a party to the detinne suit, and was not brought into it pursuant to the provisions of section 6051 of the Code, so as to be substituted in the place of the original defendant, with the result of terminating the latter’s relation to that suit. —Southern Hardware & Supply Co. v. Lester, 166 Ala. 86, 52 South. 828. Being a stranger to the suit, and not having been brought into it by the defendant therein, as authorized by the section of the Code just referred to, its claim was properly asserted in thé manner provided by section 3792 of the Code for the case of property seized in a statutory detinue suit being claimed by one not a party to the suit. That section provides for the claimant making affidavit and bond “as required by law in cases of trial of right of proprty when leived on by the writ of fieri facias,” thereby securing the delivery of the property claimed to him; that the affidavit and bond be returned by the officer having in charge the property claimed; and that “thereupon the same proceedings be had as in other trials of the right of property.” The claimant did not supplant the defendant in the original suit or subject himself to the same judgment as to recovery of the property and damages for its detention as would have been recoverable against the original defendant, but became a party to a new and separate, though dependent and collateral, proceeding, for the conduct of which the provisions governing a statutory trial of the right of property are to be looked to. — Keyser v. Maas & Schwarz, 111 Ala. 390, 21 South. 346; Howard v. Deans, 143 Ala. 423, 39 South. 346; Merchants’ National Bank v. Bales, 148 Ala. 279, 41 South. 516; Holloway v. Burroughs & Taylor Co., 4 Ala. App. 630, 58 South. 953.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Faulk v. Dorsey
166 So. 792 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1936)
Slaughter v. Webster
70 So. 129 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 So. 516, 6 Ala. App. 262, 1912 Ala. App. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shreve-milligan-live-stock-vehicle-co-v-pelham-alactapp-1912.