104 Ala. 471 | Ala. | 1894
Appeals and writs of error may be prosecuted or sued out in the federal courts within two years from the rendition of the judgment or decree (Rev. Stat., § 1008) ; and in this State, as we have seen, an appeal must be taken within one year from the rendition of the judgment or decree. The time for prosecuting an appeal in the federal courts, on a ruling of a court on a motion for a new trial in a cause, is not regulated by statute, nor have appeals from such rulings of the courts in this State been made a matter of statutory regulation. The rule as laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States on the question is, “that if a motion or a petition for a rehearing is made or presented in season and en
In this case, the motion for a new trial was made at the same term at which the judgment was rendered, and within a few days thereafter was entertained by the court, and, after orders of continuance, was overruled at a subsequent day of the term. The appeal is not from the order overruling the motion for a new trial; but it is from the judgment alone, as is manifested by the security for the costs, the citation, and certificate of appeal. We are constrained to hold, on reason and authority, that for the purposes of the appeal, the judgment did not become final until the 21st day of April, 1892, — the date of the judgment of the court, overruling a motion for a new trial — and that the cause is properly here on appeal. The motion to strike from the record the assignments of error in the rulings of the court on the trial of the cause is overruled.
There is no denial of the fact, that the plaintiff was elected the vice-president and general manager of the defendant company, on or about the 11 January, 1889, at an annual salary of $5,000 ; and the whole defense is, that for a valid consideration, as set up in said 2d plea, the plaintiff did, on or about the 24th of October, 1889, release all his claim for salary as an officer of the company, for services theretofore, or to be thereafter, rendered. In order to prove the averments of this plea, the defendant filed interrogatories to W. A. Hudson, who was the president of the defendant company, and also to. Pollock, Stinson, Woll and Dornan. On the cross-examination of these witnesses, each was asked many very impertinent and irrelevant questions, to undertake to point out which, on objections raised by defendant, would consume much time and labor, and swell the re;port-of .this case .to an undue and useless length. Eor
The other parts of said Field’s examination, in which he was allowed to state why he resigned ;- his conversation with Hudson about his salary ; that Hudson was a salaried officer and got his pay; and the letter of Hudson to Field, of date November 1, 1889 ; the statement that Hudson was in arrears to the. company ; that the salary of the secretary was paid; the .conversation..between Allen and plaintiff about the collection of his salary, and
7. Charges 1, 2 and 5, at the request of the plaintiff, should not have been given. — Harris v. Russell, 93 Ala. 60 ; Rowe v. Baber, Ib. 422 ; Ala. G. S. R. R. Co. v. Hill, Ib. 516.
Charge No. 3 as requested by plaintiff was applicable to defendant’s 2d and 3d pleas, and in effect instructed the jury that the defendant must make good the release there set up. The .contract had been only partly performed, and money was due on it to plaintiff. For like reasons, charge 9 was free from error.— Westmoreland v. Porter, 75 Ala. 460; Nesbitt v. McCee, 26 Ala. 748. If the defendant apprehended the jury might have been misled, in anywise, by these charges, it was competent for it to have asked an explanatory charge.
Reversed and remanded.