State ex rel. Powell v. General Acceptance Corp.

114 So. 2d 920, 269 Ala. 627, 1959 Ala. LEXIS 568
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 8, 1959
Docket6 Div. 399
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 114 So. 2d 920 (State ex rel. Powell v. General Acceptance Corp.) 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
State ex rel. Powell v. General Acceptance Corp., 114 So. 2d 920, 269 Ala. 627, 1959 Ala. LEXIS 568 (Ala. 1959).

Opinion

STAKELY, Justice.

This action was commenced by the filing of an original bill of complaint in the Circuit Court of the Tenth Judicial Circuit of Alabama, in Equity. The bill of complaint undertakes to bring this action in the name of the State of Alabama on the relation of James M. Powell, in the name of the State of Alabama on the relation of James M. Powell as a member of a class, and individually in his own name, James M. Powell.

The bill of complaint charges that the operation of the General Acceptance Corporation, a corporation, in financing sales of used automobiles involves excessive and usurious interest exactions and constitutes a nuisance both public and private.

It is alleged in substance that James M. Powell is a member of a large class of poor white and colored people living in Jefferson County, Alabama, who are poorly educated, can hardly read and write, have no or little money with which to retain legal counsel to advise them, are not competent to read and understand printed contracts connected with the purchase and financing of automobiles and are not able to analyze such printed contracts so as to be able to determine the interest rates expressed and implied in such contracts and the different members of the class are persons of which James M. Powell is a member are continuing from day to day and from time to time and are presently purchasing automobiles from the General Acceptance Corporation and are pres[629]*629ently suffering damages from day to day and from time to time by reason of the fact that the aforesaid respondent is continuing and will continue to perpetrate and maintain a public nuisance and private nuisance and by necessity the members of this class must purchase automobiles on credit as they have not the money with which to pay cash in advance and each member of said class is suffering and will continue to suffer damages peculiar to himself and to suffer damages different and distinct from that suffered by each of the other members of this class and that James M. Powell did suffer damages different and distinct from those suffered by each of the other members of said class. It is further alleged that the State of Alabama in its sovereign capacity is interested in the protection of its citizens, particularly small wage earners from invasion of their legal rights and from the illegal extraction or extortion of moneys which such citizens are not legally required to pay. It is further alleged that the respondents will continue to violate the provisions of the statutes of the State of Alabama with reference to usurious interest and will continue to institute large numbers of vexatious actions in the courts of Jefferson County for the purpose of attempting to enforce or collect usurious sums of money and interest and that processes of the courts of Jefferson County will continue to be abused by such actions unless restrained by the decree of this court.

It is further alleged that James M. Powell had paid his contract on his automobile down to a balance of $176.04 when he was forced out of employment due to a general work stoppage by strike and at the time requested an extension of time in which to make his payment of the balance of $176.-04, that the General Acceptance Corporation by and through its agents or employees tricked James M. Powell into surrendering his automobile by promising him that if he would turn the car in and leave it a week, he could get it back and that they would hold it for him and not sell or dispose of it and would protect his interest in the car and that when he surrendered the car, the defendant refused to let him have it back and refused to grant him extension of time to make the payments until the strike was over.

The bill closes with a prayer asking a temporary and permanent injunction against General Acceptance Corporation, enjoining the aforesaid corporation, its servants, agents and employees from charging usurious interest in their business transactions. The bill also seeks a monetary judgment, including damages both actual and punitive and closes with a prayer that the court find that General Acceptance Corporation has violated the personal rights of James M. Powell in falsely, maliciously and willfully obtaining usurious interest, and requesting that the court direct General Acceptance Corporation to refund to James M. Powell the sum of $9IL-IA for wanton and willful trespass and in addition thereto punitive damages in the amount of $50,000.

General Acceptance Corporation filed its sworn plea in abatement to the sworn bill of complaint. This plea in abatement takes the position that James M. Powell lacks authority to bring this action in the name of the State of Alabama.

On a motion to dismiss the plea in abatement, the court below rendered a decree holding the plea in abatement legally sufficient. The decree reads, in part, as follows :

“It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed by the Court that the plea in abatement be, and the same hereby is held legally sufficient as against complainants’ motion insofar as further maintenance of the bill in the name of the State of Alabama as a party complainant is concerned. As to the individual complainant, the plea discloses no matter in abatement, nor does it purport to challenge the authority of the complainant’s own solicitor to maintain the bill in his individual behalf.”

[630]*630Subsequently the appellants filed in the court below their motion to set aside the decree holding the plea in abatement legally sufficient. Thereafter the circuit judge, in equity, sitting, rendered a decree overruling and denying appellants’ motion to set aside the decree holding the plea in abatement legally sufficient.

Subsequently on January 30, 1959, there was an appeal to this court from the decree holding the plea in abatement legally sufficient, which was rendered on the 19th day of December, 1958, and from the de.cree overruling, the motion to set aside the decree holding the plea in abatement legally sufficient.

The assignments of error contain a “prayer for alternative relief: and/or petition for mandamus, and/or petition for certiorari and/or petition for construction of a statute.”

I. This court has held that an appeal will not lie from a decree sustaining the legal sufficiency of a plea in abatement. Martin v. Martin, 267 Ala. 600, 104 So.2d 302; Ex parte Little, 266 Ala. 161, 95 So.2d 269; Dorrough v. McKee, 264 Ala. 663, 89 So.2d 77.

This court will ex mero motu dismiss an appeal which is predicated on a nonappealable order. Tarvin v. Tarvin, 266 Ala. 214, 95 So.2d 397. In this connection, § 755, Title 7, Code of 1940, which is the statutory authorization for appeals from certain interlocutory decrees in equity, with the exception of interlocutory injunctive orders, makes no provision for appeals from a ruling on the sufficiency of a plea in equity. Tarvin v. Tarvin, supra.

We think it necessarily follows that if an appeal will not lie from a decree sustaining the sufficiency of a plea in abatement, an appeal will not lie from a decree overruling and denying a motion to set aside a decree holding a plea in abatement legally sufficient. The motion here really seems to be a motion for a rehearing and in equity a decree on a motion for a rehearing is not appealable unless the original decree is modified. Equity Rule 62, Code 1940, Tit. 7 Appendix; Capps v. Norden, 261 Ala. 676, 75 So.2d 915.

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114 So. 2d 920, 269 Ala. 627, 1959 Ala. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-powell-v-general-acceptance-corp-ala-1959.