182 So. 54 | Ala. | 1938
There are three appeals on the record, the first: 6 Div. 287, by Robert Berman, trading as Berman Bros. Iron Metal Co., from the interlocutory decree of the court, of January 25, 1938, overruling said defendant's separate demurrer to the bill. 6 Div. 290, is the appeal of the defendant Louisville Nashville Railroad Company, from the same decree overruling its separate demurrer to the bill. 6 Div. 291, is the appeal of the complainant, Wreck-A-Pair Building Company, from the decretal order of the court dissolving the injunction granted and issued March 5, 1937.
In respect to the appeal last mentioned, 6 Div. 291, the appellant submitted without assignment of error. Therefore, the decree from which that appeal is taken will be affirmed, the cost of the appeal incurred in the circuit court and in this court is taxed against said appellant Wreck-A-Pair Building Company. Redd Chemical Nitrate Co. v. W. T. Clay Mercantile Co.,
The appellee, Wreck-A-Pair Building Company, named in the other appeals, has submitted a motion to dismiss the same on the ground that one appeal has already been prosecuted by the defendant Berman, trading as Berman Bros. Iron Metal Company, under § 8307 of the Code, from the decree or fiat granting the injunction, which decree also passed on the demurrers to the bill, and on that appeal the equity of the bill was upheld. Berman v. Wreck-A-Pair Bldg. Co.,
The motion is rested upon the provisions of § 6080 of the Code 1923, embodied in Article 1, Chapter 257, dealing with appeals generally, and immediately following § 6079, authorizing appeals from decrees "sustaining or overruling a demurrer to a bill in equity, or to a cross bill, * * * to be taken within thirty days from the rendition thereof."
Section 8307 is embraced within Chapter 304 of the Code, dealing with injunctions and the granting thereof, and authorizes an appeal to the Supreme Court, "From the order granting or refusing the writ of injunction," to be taken "within ten days, to be heard as preferred cases in that court, on the first Thursday the court is in session after the expiration of the ten days, or as soon thereafter as may be."
Section 6080 provides:
"Only one appeal to test equity of bill, complaint orpetition allowed. — Whenever the equity of a bill, complaint or petition has been tested and upheld by the supreme court on an appeal from any interlocutory order, judgment, or decree, no other appeal can be taken from any subsequent interlocutory order, judgment or decree; but the rulings of the trial court on any such interlocutory orders, judgments or decrees may be reviewed by the supreme court on appeal from the final judgment." [Italics supplied.] *304
We are of opinion that it was the legislative intent to deny more than one appeal from interlocutory orders, judgments or decrees, the appeals from which are provided for in Article 1, Chapter 257 of the Code, 1923, and that appeals from orders or fiats granting or refusing injunctions are not within the influence of § 6080 of the Code. This statute has been so applied in all of our decisions dealing with the question.
In Brasher v. Grayson,
The motion to dismiss said appeals, is therefore overruled. Thomas et al. v. Skeggs,
The court observed:
"Without going into details, the bill presents a case of justiciable controversies, construing the contracts and declaring the rights of each of the parties in properties to which conflicting rights of possession and ownership are being asserted. The question of who is entitled to salvage the articles or materials is also involved.
"It should be kept in mind that the equity of a bill under the Declaratory Judgment Act does not turn on whether a case is made for an injunction.
"This is a statutory jurisdiction, to be exercised in the cases and to the ends defined by statute, does not depend on the absence of other remedies. It is alternate in character. One of its chief fields is to define legal rights, obligations, and relations over which real and substantial controversies have arisen before there has been an invasion of rights giving rise to other forms of action. * * *
"Further relief may be had in such proceeding if necessary to complete relief. Gen.Acts 1935, p. 777, § 8."
The court by these utterances, when considered in the light of the provisions of the Declaratory Judgment Act, found in § 1, dealing with "Scope" as follows:
"Courts of record within their respective jurisdictions shall have power to declare rights, status, and other legal relations whether or not further relief is or could be claimed. No action or proceeding shall be open to objection on the ground that a declaratory judgment or decree is prayed for. The declaration may be either affirmative or negative in form and effect; and such declarations shall have the force and effect of a final judgment or decree." [Italics supplied.]
And § 8, "Supplemental Relief," providing, that:
"Further relief based on a declaratory judgment or decree may be granted whenever necessary or proper. The applicationtherefor shall be by petition to a court having jurisdiction togrant the relief. If the application be deemed sufficient, the court shall, on reasonable notice, require any adverse party whose rights have been adjudicated by the declaratory judgment or decree, to show cause why further relief should not be granted forthwith," holds that in exercising the jurisdiction "to declare rights, status, and other legal relations" — in granting purely declaratory relief — the question of the absence or not of other adequate remedies is not material. But we do not construe this language to mean that the Declaratory Judgment Act had the effect to obliterate the distinction between proceedings in equity and actions at law in giving coercive relief. [Italics supplied].
The language of § 1, quoted above, dealing with scope, refers to the territorial jurisdiction or venue, and the language of § 8, to the jurisdiction over subject matter; and contemplates the prosecution of suits in equity for coercive relief on equitable causes of action, and actions in the common law courts on legal causes of actions seeking coercive judgments. Brindley et al. v. Meara et al.,
This construction is strengthened by the language of § 9 of the Act, which provides:
"Jury Trial. When a proceeding under this act involves the determination of an issue of fact, such issue may be tried and determined in the same manner as issues of fact are tried and determined in other civil actions in the court in which the proceeding is pending." [Italics supplied.] Acts 1935, pp. 777, 778; Tuscaloosa County v. Shamblin,
The controversy presented by the bill as between the complainant and Berman, treating amendable defects as amended, as must be done as against the general demurrer for want of equity, is in respect to the right to salvage property purchased by said parties, from the Railroad Company, and delivered to them on the grounds, "as is and where is" when the contract was made and the purchase price paid, resulting in full performance of the contracts by the Railroad Company. McDuffie v. Lynchburg Shoe Co.,
The averments of the 'bill show that Berman, by repeated and continuing trespasses, and conversions, is taking and converting to his use property purchased and paid for by and delivered to the complainant, and is mingling the same with property of his own, destroying the identity of the property, so wrongfully taken, and shipping the same away so that its value can not be estimated or ascertained. These averments, if sustained by proof, are sufficient to give the complainant an equitable cause of action, for discovery, accounting and relief, without regard to the Declaratory Judgment Act. Howell v. City of Dothan,
The appellant Berman, taking the averments of the bill as true, as must be done on demurrer, is a wrong-doer, and is in no position to dispute with the complainant as to the source and soundness of complainant's title. Code 1923, §§ 5667-5671.
The pleader, however, in framing the bill was not content to follow the directions of the statute, Code 1923, § 6525, that a bill in equity must contain "a clear and orderly statement of the facts on which the suit is founded, without prolixity or repetition," but instead pleaded matters of evidence and inferences and conclusions drawn by the pleader therefrom, a practice that has been disapproved. Ingalls Steel Products Co. v. Foster Creighton Co.,
In one paragraph, the bill quoted from the complainant's letter to the Railroad Company submitting its proposition as follows:
"We herewith submit our bid for demolishing buildings located at Oakwood, Ala., known as the L. N., Shops as follows:
" 'We will wreck and remove all buildings, salvage, overhead and underground pipe, two transfer tables, racks, and all miscellaneous items called buildings, at our expense, one machine shop, the round house, the oil house and machinery not to be included. We offer you for the above $5,251.00 "as is and where is."
" 'We also propose to pay you an additional $4,000.00 making a total of $9,251.00, if you will allow us free freight to Birmingham on 70 carloads of the above materials.' "
The averments of the bill show that the negotiations between complainant and the Railroad Company eventuated in a written contract, a copy of which is attached to the bill, in which the property is described as "All shop buildings on the east side of our tracks at point in question including two (2) transfer tables, with the exception of the round house, oil house, machine shop, white firemen's and engineers' washroom, negro firemen's washroom, hostlers' shanty, brick sand house, and coal trestle and bin.
"In consideration of doing this work, and for cash payment herein specified, all lumber, structural and reinforcing steel, brick, stone roofing of every description, sheet metal work, including guttering and drain pipes, all millwork, hardware, all plumbing fixtures and piping for same, all heating apparatus, radiators, piping and valves, all electric lighting fixtures, wiring, switches, pull in boxes, outlet boxes, conduits, etc., derived from such wrecking shall become the property of the Contractor as of the date hereof."
Attached to the contract was a list of property, consisting of machinery and tools, in the various shop buildings, previously sold to Berman.
The bill, in the tenth paragraph avers, that Berman is claiming "certain property and items called for and sold by the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company to this complainant;" and in paragraph 11, "That *306 among the items so in dispute between the complainant and the said Robert Berman were 'Transmission lines involving the steam lines to machinery, air lines to machinery, and 220 volt electric transmission line,' which items had been sold to the complainant but were being also claimed by the said Robert Berman. That on complaint of the complainant in reference to said disputed items, the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company wrote a letter to Berman Bros., Iron Metal Company, and this complainant under date of January 8, 1937, as follows."
Then followed extensive quotations from said letter, to the general effect that there had been a conference of the purchasing agent; and others, from the chief engineer's office of the Railroad Company relative to items in dispute between Berman and complainant, and that it was "concensus of opinion that no doubt the transmission lines involving the steam lines to machines, and the 220 Volt Electric Transmission lines were disposed of in good faith to both parties;" and suggesting a method of adjustment by preserving the disputed items until all the property was salvaged, and that the Railroad Company would pay the party the value who suffered the loss. And then followed extensive quotations from a letter written by complainant's attorney to the Railroad Company.
Then follows extensive quotations from the correspondence between the parties, and concluding with the following:
"Complainant avers that by said letter to the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company sought to modify the contract theretofore made between it and the complainant, and that the complainant acquiesced in said modification and was thereby unable to wreck a building at the time as provided and intended in the original contract. * * * That by reason of said modification, the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company did not deliver the said buildings in which employees of Berman Brothers Iron Metal Company were engaged in removing material at the time provided in the contract and have not delivered possession of some of said buildings for said reason up to this time." Among others, the buildings known as the blacksmith shop and "boiler house," which, without fault of complainant, were destroyed by fire, and the materials therein rendered valueless.
In the written contract evidencing the purchase by the complainant from the Railroad Company is embodied the following stipulations:
"The second party [the Railroad Company] states the buildings to be wrecked are its property and it has the right to wreck same. Should the wrecking of these buildings be in violation of legal requirements of the property rights of others, the second party will defend the first party [complainant] against any suit or action brought against him for such violation and shall pay all fines, damages and assessments levied against the first party as the result of such suit or action.
"When this contract has been signed and the stipulated cash payment made by the first party to the second party, it is understood and agreed the buildings shall become the property of the first party and he shall become responsible for same and bear without recourse any damage by theft, fire, water or wind. To protect his interests, party of the first part may, if he desires, place watchman on the premises, and insure the structures against fire, water and windstorm."
The grounds of demurrer interposed by Berman are numerous and we will not undertake to discuss them in detail. Those pointing out the equivocal effect of the averments, and the pleader's conclusions were well taken.
The bill does not describe with certainty to a common intent what property was taken by Berman, and complainant's ownership of some parts of the property alleged to have been taken, as pointed out on the former appeal, is too uncertain to invite joinder of issue. Berman v. Wreck-A-Pair Bldg. Co.,
We are therefore of opinion that the demurrer filed by the defendant Berman was erroneously overruled, and the decree of January 25, 1938, is reversed as to him.
In the event the complainant suffers loss or damages, in consequence of a previous sale of some of the properties to Berman, the complainant is protected by the express warranty in the contract of sale, and its remedy at law, in case of a breach by the seller, the Railroad Company is adequate and complete. And in an action for breach of warranty the warrantor is entitled to trial by jury. Miller et al. v. Gaston et al.,
The claim of complainant for loss by fire, in view of the positive stipulations of the contract, is groundless. The allegation as to modification is a mere conclusion of the pleader.
Our judgment therefore is that the bill as against the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company is without equity, and its demurrer was erroneously overruled. For this reason the decree of January 25, 1938, is reversed as to it.
Affirmed in part, and in part reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and THOMAS and KNIGHT, JJ., concur.