Southern Ry. Co. v. Woodstock Mills

161 So. 519, 230 Ala. 494, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 213
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 28, 1935
Docket6 Div. 621.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 161 So. 519 (Southern Ry. Co. v. Woodstock Mills) 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
Southern Ry. Co. v. Woodstock Mills, 161 So. 519, 230 Ala. 494, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 213 (Ala. 1935).

Opinions

BROWN, Justice.

This is an action of trover brought by the appellee, Woodstock Mills, a corporation, against the appellant, Southern Railway Company, claiming damages for the alleged conversion of personal property of the plaintiff.

The complaint consists of seven counts. In counts 1 and 2 the property alleged to have 'been converted is described as “Two (2) carloads of machinery, shipped from Pel-ham, Georgia, on the 7th day of April, 1933, by V. T. McKee to J. S. McKee at Anniston, Alabama.” In count 5 the property is described as “a quantity of cotton mill machinery, including st,eam engines and the like.” The other counts described the property as “Two (2) carloads of scrap iron and steel.”

The defendant pleaded the general issue, with leave, etc.

The effect of the general issue in the action of trover imposed on the plaintiff the burden of showing that it had title, general or special, in the property; had possession or the right to immediate possession at the time of the alleged conversion. Stanley v. People’s Sav. Bank, 229 Ala. 446, 157 So. 844. It also imposed on the plaintiff the burden of showing that the defendant wrongfully destroyed plaintiff’s right and title, or unlawfully interfered with his use, enjoyment, or dominion over it, or appropriated it to defendant’s use or to the use of another in disregard or defiance of the owner’s right. Bolling v. Kirby & Brother, 90 Ala. 215, 7 So. 914, 24 Am. St. Rep. 789. And the defendant may show justification under the plea of the general issue. Barrett v. City of Mobile et al., 129 Ala. 179, 30 So. 36, 87 Am. St. Rep. 54.

The evidence is without dispute that the property involved consisted of two units of used electrical machinery, purchased by the plaintiff, acting through its president, Dudley D. Campbell, and its vice president, V. T. McKee, at Pelham, Ga., for the primary purpose of dismantling the same and shipping .it to Anniston, Ala., and there rebuilding and installing it as a power plant. Some of the minor parts of the machines had been removed,, and all of it had been considerably used as a power plant, but had been in disuse for' a number of years. The two units were dismantled, so far as necessary, for shipment, and the parts loaded on railroad cars by the plaintiff’s engineer at Pelham, Ga. Y. T. McKee then procured from the railroad agent at Pelham two bills of lading, one for each car loaded, consigning the shipments to J. S. McKee, Anniston, Ala.

J. S. McKee was not an officer or agent of the plaintiff and in no way concerned in its business, but was a brother of V. T. McKee.

The shipments were consigned to J. S. McKee to conceal plaintiff’s ownership .of the property, and the fact that it purposed to install the same in its plant to generate power for use in the operation of plaintiff’s mills.

The property was classified on the bills of lading as “scrap iron and steel,” and the bilis of lading indorsed on their face SL&C, indicating the shipper’s load and count. The freight was computed on the classification embodied in the bills of lading, and on one carload $84.25, and on the other $85.26, were prepaid as freight to the railroad agent at Pelham, Ga.

After the two cars arrived in Anniston, about midday on Monday, April 10, 1933, said Y. T. McKee called the office of the defendant’s yardmaster and talked to a clerk in the yardmaster’s office, requesting that the cars be switched onto the loading tracks on the property of the Woodstock Mills. They were so placed between 2:30 a. m. and 3 o'clock p. m. April 10, 1933; one car inside the gate and the other left standing in the gateway. The “master mechanic” then told Y. T. McKee that the cars had been placed as requested, and McKee went down and looked at them. The switch engine at that time had been cut loose and moved away.

H. H. Witt, the defendant’s agent at Anniston,, testified: .“The first I knew of.it was when the cars were received there on Sunday, the 8th of April. They arrived consigned to Mr. McKee, who we didn’t know and the cars were placed on what we call our team track or hold track. Our yardmaster called my office on Monday morning and stated that Mr. McKee had called him and asked him that those cars be placed on the Woodstock Cotton Mill siding for unloading and wanted to know if it was all right to place them, and I authorized him to place them at that point for unloading. I inspected the ears Monday morning about ten o’clock, on the track of the Woodstock Mills. At the time I inspected them, I didn’t talk to anybody except some workmen who were preparing a place to unload the machinery and set it up. I had no conversation with Mr. McKee at that time. I then returned to my office and ascertained the correct rate on secondhand machinery and called up Mr. McKee over the telephone and *521 told him that I had inspected the cars and found that they were secondhand machinery instead of scrap iron and there would be additional charges on .the shipments and that he would have to pay those charges before he unloaded them, and he asked me to come down to see him and discuss the matter with him, and I immediately went down to his office and we went out to the ears and inspected the cars and I stood there and talked with him for nearly an hour explaining to him why we couldn’t apply the scrap iron rate to the shipments, and he argued that since he had bought the shipments as scrap iron at scrap iron rates that we couldn’t apply the machinery rates to the shipments, and I told him in my opinion we couldn’t apply the scrap iron rates, but if he contended that the scrap iron rates should apply I told him I would be glad to notify the Southern Weighing & Inspection Bureau and let them send an inspector over there to pass judgment as to the correct classification on the shipments. That conversation was about 11:00 a. m., on Tuesday, the 11th of April. At that time nothing had been removed from the cars at all and I asked Mr. McKee if he would instruct his men not to unload any part of the freight at all until he had paid the additional charges and he said he wouldn’t unload any part of it at all, and then we talked on and discussed the matter another 30 or 40 minutes, and then I asked him the same question again, and I told him I would have to pull the cars out unless he did agree to pay ,the additional charges, and he said well, that wouldn’t be necessary, that he wouldn’t unload any of them, that he would just let them stay where they were. The next time I saw those ears was that afternoon as I started home, about five o’clock, I went by the Woodstock Cotton Mill for the purpose of seeing whether or not any of the freight had been unloaded and they were unloading some of the machinery at that time. I went on home and called the Woodstock Cotton Mills and asked for Mr. McKee and he was out and I talked to Mr. Campbell and told him that Mr. McKee had promised not to unload any of the material and that they were unloading it and that I would have to pull the cars out unless he stopped unloading it, and Mr. Campbell stated that he didn’t intend to stop unloading it but was going to continue to unload it, and I then called our yard and instructed them to pull the cars out. When I got down to the office the next morning around eight o’clock I found the cars had not been switched out of the plant and I got on the switch engine myself and went down there and had the cars pulled out. The cars were pulled out on Wednesday morning, April 12th, about 8:30. Some of the shipment had been removed from the cars when they were pulled out.

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Bluebook (online)
161 So. 519, 230 Ala. 494, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-ry-co-v-woodstock-mills-ala-1935.