107 Ala. 496 | Ala. | 1894
The appellee, Umbenliauer, sued out an attachment which was levied upon certain goods as the property of S. Kaufman, the defendant in the attachment suit. The Bayonne Knife Company interposed a claim to the property, and an issue was made up under the direction of the court for the trial of the right of property. The court tried the case without the intervention of a jury and found the issue for the plaintiff. When the court, without a jury, determines the issue, the rule is, that if there are no errors in the exclusion of evidence, and the legal evidence received authorized the conclusion, although there may have been illegal evidence admitted, the conclusion reached must be sustained. The goods in question were shipped by claimant to S. Kaufman at Birmingham, Ala., where he had been engaged in the mercantile business. At the time the goods reached Birmingham, the store of Kaufman had been closed by the sheriff, by virtue of sundry attachments issued against him. The goods in question were levied upon by plaintiff while they were in the depot of the railroad, in Birmingham, and which, after the freight charges were paid by plaintiff, were delivered to the officers making the levy by the carrier, without objection. The goods were shipped to Kaufman in the month of October, under an order given for them in March previous. There is evidence tending to show that as soon as claimant learned that the store of Kaufman had been closed by attachments, it directed the carrier to return the goods, but when this direction was given, whether before or after they,had been levied upon by plaintiff’s attachment is not shown, nor has any' fact been proven which tended to show when the order to return the goods was given to thp carrier. The right of stoppage in transitu depends upon the insolvency of the
After judgment by the trial court, the claimant entered amotion for a .new trial, upon the ground that ho vyas taken by surprise by the testimony of Kaufman as to his solvency; and newly discovered evidence, to the effect that Kaufman .was in fact insolvent at the time ,of the levy .of the attachment, and when the claim to the property. w'as. iñterposed. The insolvency of tho vendee, .being indispensable to.'the exercise ofx the right of stoppage irt tránsitxk, i.'the” vendor intending -to rely upon it must be prepared to establish this fact The attorney for claimant makes affidavit that, hé ■ was- de
As to newly discovered evidence, we are of opinion from tiie affidavit of Kaufman which is not controverted, that an application to the Commercial Agency would have put plaintiff’s attorney in possession of the facts of Kaufman’s business in Georgia. The claimant itself offers no evidence to show that if was ignorant of his business in that State. All legal objections were taken to the introduction of tire affidavit of an attorney residing in Georgia. The jurat is certified to by one who attaches to his name, the letters N. P. A certificate of this character is not self-proving, A notarial seal, conforming to the requirements of the statute, is indispensable. — Ala. State Bank v. Chatt. Door & Sash Co., (18 So. Rep. 74) The judge did not err in overruling the motion for anew trial upon the evidence before him.
Affirmed,