Beavers v. Hardie & Co.

48 Ala. 95 | Ala. | 1872

B. F. SAFFOLD, J.

-The complaint is composed of seven counts, to each of which and to the complaint as a whole a demurrer was sustained. The counts are by no means as explicit as they should be. "Whether they are so defective as not to contain a cause of action, and so drawn as to constitute a misjoinder of actions, are the questions to be determined.'

The first count claims damages of the defendants because they, as factors and commission merchants, received from the plaintiff one hundred and one bales of cotton on *97storage and, for sale for a reward, under an agreement not to sell the said cotton for less than ten cents a pound. They, however, sold the cotton for seven and a quarter cents a pound. Is this a sufficient statement of a cause of action, and if so, is it an assumpsit or case ?

The Bevised Code, in section 2629, requires all pleadings to be as brief as is consistent with perspicuity, and the presentation of the facts or matter to be put in issue in an intelligible form; and allows no objection for defect of form, if facts are so presented that a material issue in law or fact can be taken by the adverse party thereon. Its schedule of forms of pleading in civil proceedings, beginning on page 673, contains the form of a complaint applicable to most causes of action, if not to all. Of actions ex delicto there is a form for trover in that for the conversion of chattels, for detinue in the one for the recovery of chattels in specie, for trespass, and for case in several special instances. All of these forms have been uniformly held to be sufficient in the cases to which they were applicable, whether in actions ex contractu or ex delicto. The statute law has not, in its effort to simplify pleading, destroyed the distinction of actions as observed by the common law. Hence, in reference to the joinder of forms of action, a count in assumpsit can not be joined with one in case or trover.

Assumpsit and case are frequently concurrent remedies, and sometimes, when the cause of action is not fully set out, it becomes a nice question to which of these forms the count or complaint shall be referred. Where there is an express promise, and a legal obligation results from it, then the plaintiff’s cause of action is most accurately described in assumpsit, in which the promise is stated as the gist of the action. But where, from a given state of facts the law raises a legal obligation to do a particular act, and there is a breach of that obligation, and a consequential damage, there, although assumpsit may be maintainable upon a promise implied by law to do the act, still, an action on the case founded in tort is the more proper form of action, in which the plaintiff in his declaration states the facts out of *98which, the legal obligation arises, the obligation itself, the breach of it, and. damage resulting from that breach.— 1 Chit. Pl. 135.

The common law forms of declarations in case uniformly aver that the act or conduct of the defendant was tortious. In very many cases, this is indispensable; for instance, in those where there is no contract or agreement between the parties, and the defendant might have lawfully done what he is complained of for doing. But in torts growing out of breaches of contract, the tort and the breach are sometimes so intimately blended that even a sufficient statement of the case will leave the form of action doubtful.

In Wilkinson v. Mosely, (18 Ala. 288,) a test of distinction is stated to be, that if the cause of action, as set out in the declaration, arises from a breach of promise, the action is ex contractu; but if, from a breach of duty growing out of the contract, it is in form ex delicto and case. In the count under consideration, the only violation of duty charged against the defendants is selling the cotton for less than the price which they promised, and were instructed to obtain. — 2 Chit. Plead, pp. 675 and 725a, the forms of counts for selling before default property pledged as security for a loan of money, and for not selling goods dis-trained for the best price, are in substance the §ame as the one under consideration, except that they aver a tortious intention and act of the defendant. Hnder our law of pleading such- an averment is not necessary, if the facts related and the breach charged naturally indicate the tortious conduct. — Blick v. Briggs, 6 Ala. 687; Austill & Marshall v. Crawford, 7 Ala. 335-342.

"We decide, that the first count is one in case, and as the other counts are less indefinite, the judgment must be reversed. The amended complaint seems to come more nearly under the head of trover, but that action may be united with case.

The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.

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