55 So. 951 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1911
This case was tried in the court below without a jury. The bill of exceptions shows, that, without objection by either pai;ty, the trial was entered upon and proceeded to its conclusion as if there
Although the record proper does not disclose that any plea, other than the plea in abatement, was interposed to the complaint, yet, as the bill of exceptions shows that both parties, without objection, proceeded with the trial as if the averments of the complaint had been put in issue regularly, this court will review the action of the trial court just as if the record showed that an issue actually tried had been made up in due form. In such case the missing plea is supplied by intendment.—Hardeman v. Williams, 150 Ala. 415, 43 South. 726, 10 L. R. A. (N. S.) 653; Richmond & Danville R. Co. v. Farmer, 97 Ala. 141, 12 South. 86; Wade v. Killough, 3 Stew. & P. 431.
The recital in the minute entry as to a joinder of issue being merely that “issue being now joined,” without specifying upon what pleadings, the implication indulged from the recitals of the bill of exceptions involves no contradiction of the minute entry. The case being before the court, sitting without a jury, it was not necessary that the issues on the plea in abatement be actually disposed of before hearing the evidence under the plea of the general issue. By consent of the parties, the evidence on both issues could be submitted to the court at the same hearing, without any waiver by the defendant of the benefit of his plea in abatement.
The ground of recovery disclosed by the complaint is the alleged falsity, accompanied by an intent to defraud, of the representation charged to have been so made by the defendant to the plaintiff as to constitute a false pretense, by means of which the defendant obtained a loan of money from the plaintiff. The representation as averred was of the existence of several facts, which considered together, were calculated to induce the plaintiff to extend credit to the defendant.
The plaintiff sets up the fraudulent making of one false representation as constituting a single ground of recovery, not the fraudulent making of several false representations, each of which severally was relied on as constituting a seperate ground of recovery. According to the complaint, the making of the one representation as an entirety was the means whereby the plaintiff was induced to make the loan. In such case the complaint is not sustained by proof going no further than to show the falsity of one of the several statements contained in the one representation alleged. The allegation of the falsity of the one alleged representation as an entirety is descriptive of the tort complained of, and is not sustained by proof of the falsity of only a part of such representation.—Highland Avenue & Belt R. Co. v. Dusenberry, 94 Ala. 413, 10 South. 274; Smith v. Causey, 28 Ala. 655, 65 Am. Dec. 372; Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Coulton, 86 Ala. 129, 5 South. 458; Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Mothershed, 97 Ala. 261, 12 South. 714. No evidence was offered tending to prove the falsity of the part of the representation alleged to the effect that the defendant had given no
With the whole case on the evidence thus before the court, sitting without a jury, on a submission at one hearing of the evidence on the issue made by the plea of the general issue to the complaint, and of the evidence offered in support of the plea in abatement, and it being disclosed that the evidence offered by the plaintiff was insufficient to sustain the averments of its complaint, the court was justified in rendering judgment in favor of the defendant, without concerning itself about the plea in abatement, as whatever ruling might have been made in reference to that plea could not ultimately inure to the benefit or harm of a plaintiff, which did not have at its command enough evidence to sustain the material averments of its complaint. The questions as to the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s replication to defendant’s plea in abatement, the demurrer to which had been sustained, and as to whether the plea in abatement was proved by the evidence offered in its support, became mere moot questions, when the plaintiff’s case, as alleged in its complaint, collapsed for the lack of the necessary evidence to sustain it.
Affirmed.