69 So. 956 | Ala. | 1915
This is an action on a fire insurance policy. The property insured consisted of a ginhouse, cotton ginning machinery, a gristmill, and an engine and boiler. The whole amount of the insurance was $2,500, but this was apportioned separately as to each item above specified, as follows: $300 on the ginhouse, $1,500 on the ginning machinery, $200 on the-gristmill, and $500 on the engine and boiler.
Moreover, it clearly appears from an inspection of the record in this case, including the verdict of the jury and the judgment entry, that the jury did not find for the plaintiffs as to the penalty; and hence no injury could result to the defendant as to any adverse ruling which related alone to the penalty.
To the complaint the defendant filed. 84 pleas, all of which were special except the first two. The plaintiffs demurred to pleas, 7, 10, 11, 12, 17, 19, 20, 28, 24,-27, 31, and 34, the demurrer being sustained as to each of the pleas enumerated above. The plaintiffs filed three replications to the other special pleas as to which no demurrers were interposed, which pleas were numbered 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 21, 22, 25, .26, 28, 29, 30, 32, and 33. A demurrer was interposed to replication 3, but plaintiffs withdrew this replication and thus eliminated it from the issues. The defendant then filed a rejoinder to replications 1 and 2, to which a demurrer was interposed, and sustained. Issue was joined on the 20 pleas last enumerated, and on replications 1 and 2, thereto filed, and the trial resulted in a verdict as follows: “We, the jury, render our verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for full amount insured, $2,500.00, with 8 per cent, interest from date policy fell due.”
This court demurs to such a multiplicity of pleadings and issues as shown by this record. How can a jury consider, pass upon, and correctly render a true verdict on all the issues raised and submitted to them on this trial? How can a trial court, within a reasonable time for the trial of a case like this, correctly instruct the jury as to the law which should govern them in passing upon and deciding each of these many issues? We intimate no criticism of the trial court or of the attorneys conducting this trial, because the practice pursued in this trial is allowed, if not encouraged, by the practice and procedure generally prevailing in this state, and records like this one are not uncommon and the number is fast increasing. Such a practice, we submit, tends to multiply and confuse the real issues rather
There was no reversible error in the court’s declining to allow the defendant to amend its answer to the interrogatories propounded to it by the plaintiffs under the statute. The offer to amend came too late.
Moreover, the objection did not go to the possibly objectionable feature of the question; that is, that the question called for the opinion of a witness touching matters of fact as to which he could not give his opinion. The objection was that it was not the proper method of proving the loss upon the engine.— Troy Co. v. Boswell, 186 Ala. 409, 65 South. 141.
There is no merit in the objection to the question propound-er to Bates, which asked the witness if another party agreed that $2,000 was the value of the machinery, or the amount of the loss by fire. The witness was only giving a shorthand rendering. of what the adjusting agent agreed was the amount of the loss. — Shafer v. Hausman, 139 Ala. 237-241, 35 South. 691.
The defendant was not entitled to the affirmative charge. No one of its special pleas was proved without conflict. It was not even shown by the undisputed evidence that any written application for the insurance policy was made by these plaintiffs. The application was probably made by one or both of the plaintiffs; but the proof fails to establish the allegations of the pleas in this respect.
Finding no error, the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.