101 So. 887 | Ala. | 1924
We can see no merit in that assignment of error taking the point that defendants' demurrer to the several counts of the complaint should have been sustained. The action, both its original and final shape — an intervening amendment having been withdrawn — was against defendants, appellants, as executors, etc., and, as for the rest, was in Code form. Code, § 5382, p. 1195.
The claim in dispute arose out of the operation of a telephone line from Cedar Bluff, in Cherokee county, to Rome, Ga. Plaintiff, defendants' testator, and others owned the line jointly. By agreement plaintiff operated the line, was to keep it in repair, and pay for its connection with the switch board of the Southern Bell Company at Rome. Defendants' testator and the other joint owners were to pay tolls for messages, as did outsiders. Defendants insisted that there could be no recovery in this action at law for the reason that there had been no settlement of the partnership affairs, and requested several special charges asserting this proposition in different forms. These charges were refused upon the idea that there was evidence tending to show a settlement of the partnership affairs between the partners, that is, between plaintiff and defendant executors a balance struck, and an acknowledgment by defendants, as executors, of the indebtedness of the estate in agreement therewith. There was such evidence, though the matter was in dispute, and the court correctly refused the charges referred to. One partner cannot sue his copartner at law, even after a dissolution, unless there has been a settlement of the partnership accounts and a balance struck (Broda v. Greenwald,
And so in substance the trial court told the jury in that part of the oral charge to which exception was reserved. It is true that a mere statement from the partnership books will not suffice to sustain a suit by one partner against another (Morrow v Riley,
The statute of nonclaim was pleaded; but the evidence showed without contradiction that letters testamentary were issued to defendants January 18, 1921, and that the claim in suit was filed and docketed in the probate court of Cherokee county January 18, 1922. This was within 12 months, as required by section 2590 of the Code of 1907. Rice v. Beavers,
The court, over defendants' objection, admitted in evidence a page from a book of account purporting to show the state of the account between plaintiff and defendants' testator, the entries in which had been made by plaintiff's wife, who kept his accounts and testified to the correctness of the items shown, except the first, which appeared in words and figures as follows: "To bal. O L-89, 133.37." Plaintiff's old ledger, from which the first item had been transferred as a statement, it seems, of the total of whatever items of debit there appeared, had been burned. We need not pronounce upon the admissibility of the entry noted above, for the reason that the objection was directed *116
against the entire sheet, and was insufficient to put the court in error, since the other items shown were properly admissible in connection with the testimony of the bookkeeper. L. N. R. R. Co. v. Britton,
Some of the entries on the page of the book admitted in evidence showed sums consolidated from smaller items, viz., long distance calls to Rome and Center. Plaintiff was properly permitted to show that copies of these entries when made were mailed to defendants' testator. This evidence was competent and relevant as going a part of the way at least in proof of the account. If such statements were rendered to testator, and by him kept without objection to their correctness for such a length of time as to raise the presumption that objection would have been made if any ground therefor existed, his silence might have been treated by the jury as an implied admission of the justness of the account; the inference of correctness being more or less strong, according to the attendant circumstances. Hirschfelder v. Levy,
Finally, it is suggested in argument that the judgment rendered purports to be a judgment against defendants personally and not as executors. But the caption of the judgment, the pleadings, and process, when read in connection with the body of the judgment, as they should be, show that the judgment undertakes only to bind defendants in their representative capacity. Bolling v. Speller,
There is no reversible error.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.