74 So. 231 | Ala. | 1917
According to the recital of the mentioned judgment the amendment was of the "first count" (demise), the only place in the complaint where the substitution permitted could be effected.
(1) It appears with certainty that the appeal from the judgment in favor of the defendants was sought and undertaken to be effected by the Gattis Turpentine Company. If the legal effect of the amendment, after the stated adverse ruling on the admission of the deed, was to substitute the Gattis Company for the Deerland Company as the actual party plaintiff (whether erroneous or not, it is not necessary to now inquire), then the appellant (Gattis Company) was not the party against whom the adverse ruling in refusing to admit the deed from the Gattis Company to the Deerland Company was made — a conveyance *6 that, if admitted, would have shown the absence of title in the Gattis Company, in which the first count laid it. If, on the other hand, the effect of the amendment was only to change the entity in which the demise was laid in the first count to another, then the Deerland Company remained (we assume for the occasion only) the actual party plaintiff; and, if so, the party plaintiff against which the judgment was rendered has not appealed, the appeal being by the Gattis Company. Hence, without attempting, for it is unnecessary, to at this time define the legal result as between the dilemmas indicated, it must be held that the first assignment of error presents nothing this court can review.
(2) On the issue of fact litigated, viz., whether the mortgage or mortgages executed the Russells on Chaney Russell's land were alone given to secure the indebtedness of the husband, no part of which was for the security of the indebtedness of the wife, Chaney, the oft-repeated rule established in Cobb v. Malone,
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and GARDNER, JJ., concur. *64