92 So. 789 | Ala. | 1922
Lead Opinion
A former appeal in this case (Grand Bay Land Co. v. Simpson) is found in
Under subdivision 1 of section 5955 of the Code of 1907 the finding of a register based on oral examination of witnesses is presumptively correct, and, if there is a reasonable doubt as to whether it is correct, such finding will not be disturbed. Andrews v. Grey,
Of the respective assignments of error by appellee in cross-appeal we need only say that the evidence has been carefully examined, and we are of opinion that the right result was announced in the register's report. It would subserve no good purpose to discuss the evidence in detail. We may say, however, of the sale of the two orchards to Mr. Foster, that, after the payment of $1,320 on *305 account thereof, the contract was duly canceled after default of purchaser, as the Grand Bay Land Company had the right to do, and resell the property. Having in good faith canceled the contract, a separate and distinct sale to Mrs. Foster of one of the orchards did not, without more, entitle Mr. Simpson to further commission. The fact that, on making the resale to Mrs. Foster, the land company sold the orchard at the "standard price," and gave her credit for the amount collected from her husband on his old contract, did not make of the new transaction a mere transfer or assignment of the husband's contract to the wife. Mr. Foster paid $1,320 on the purchase price of the two lots before default, and the register allowed Mr. Simpson a commission of one-half of that amount or $660. Of this sum Mr. Simpson had been paid and received $532, leaving a balance due him of $128.00, for which the register gave him credit on stating the account.
The second cross-assignment of error related to the sale of the Elliott orchards, on which cross-appellant claimed as his commission the sum of $900, and appellant (cross-appellee) insisted that commission of $600 be allowed by the register. Under the contract between the parties the commissions fixed at 20 per cent. of collections (without modification) would have been $900. The Grand Bay Land Company, however, insists that the contract was modified by mutual consent at the time of sale, reducing the amount to $600. The record discloses a conflict in the testimony before the register as to the item, the testimony of Mr. Clark tending to show modification, and that of Mr. Simpson to the contrary. The documentary evidence tended to show that Mr. Simpson was the bookkeeper of the Grand Bay Land Company, and a sheet of a loose-leaf ledger of that company was marked Sales Register No. A211, of January 22, 1915, in which the agent is indicated as J. M. Simpson, the subagent J. D. Clark, and rate of commission indicated opposite the name of the agent J. M. Simpson as "$600, payable 50 per cent. of cash received." There is no conflict in the evidence as to the general entries on this leaf of the sales ledger being in the handwriting of J. M. Simpson, the appellee. The evidence in behalf of Mr. Simpson tends to show that he made no such entry of the commissions as $600, but entered the same as $900, and that the amount was thereafter changed by some other person, without his knowledge or consent, to $600. The evidence further tends to show that, according to the custom of the business, Mr. Simpson should have made or would make monthly statements of commissions which he had earned, and draw on the treasurer for the balance due him; and there was in evidence a draft drawn by him which he collected and to which was attached an account showing the commissions earned by him upon this item of $600.
The parties, being sui juris, had the right to modify their original contract if they saw fit to do so; and, according to the tendency of the evidence for appellant (cross-appellee), Mr. Simpson agreed with Mr. Reichert, president of the defendant land company, to reduce the commissions on that sale from $900 to $600. Though Mr. Simpson denied this fact, the register has found and so reported that the latter did make such modified agreement as to the commissions on the Elliott sale. Under the oral and written evidence, tendency of evidence by Mr. Clark was corroborated, and the finding of the register will not be disturbed. McQueen v. Whetstone,
On the appeal of Grand Bay Land Company the insistence is made that allowance of interest was not permissible under the pleading and former decision. The direction of the circuit court to the register was to allow interest on the several sums due to complainant from the several dates when the same became due and payable, and that the defendant company be allowed interest upon each item of commission on sale of listed lands received by complainant from the date he received same, but, "Upon any portion of said commissions that complainant has paid to defendant, the register will only charge interest to the date of such payment." Appellant insists that the final decree could not be made subject to the decretal order aforesaid. A further instruction to the register, if not inconsistent with the final decree, is allowable in aid of its execution. McCalley v. Finney,
The theory of appellant's bill for accounting and the reason for the exception of allowance of affirmative relief to a respondent in said bill on answer without a cross-bill, are that such a bill is for the discovery of the balance due upon, and the settlement of, an unliquidated and mutual account requiring the aid of a court of equity. Hamilton v. Terry Fur. Loan Co. (Ala. Sup.)
We have been unable to find a case in this jurisdiction bearing directly on the point *306
presented for decision. The general rule for the allowance of interest is that the same is not recoverable upon unliquidated demands. To this text are collected many authorities in 22 Cyc. p. 1512, of which are Glidden v. Street,
"The error of the court below consists in awarding judgment for interest, when none was due."
The statute being applied provided that the penalty for the second, or any subsequent trespass is "double damages," and that, if interest be allowed "on the first recovery, by the same rule we must allow it on each subsequent recovery. This would be an enlargement of the terms of the statute, which we feel unwilling to make."
In a suit for damages for trespass by stock on account of the failure to erect or keep in proper condition a cattle guard, etc., the measure of damages was declared to be the value of the things destroyed, provided such things have a value which can be ascertained without reference to the soil; and having such an ascertainable money value, it was proper to add to the damages ascertained interest from the date when the injury was done. A. B. A. v. Brown,
The case of Ingersoll v. Campbell,
It may be conceded that the foregoing authorities bear little or no analogy to the question for decision.
In his Law of Interest, Mr. Perley formulated some general rules for the allowance of interest, deducible from the great mass of decisions, to wit: (1) The amount due must be certain; (2) the time when it is due must be certain; (3) the amount due and time of payment must be known to the debtor. Pages 25-32. In the instant suit the balance for which the aid of a court of equity was invoked could not be known until the respective mutual, unliquidated accounts were canvassed on reference and the rendition of final decree approving such finding of the register. The balance of mutual unliquidated accounts should not bear interest except from the date of the final decree. Were the balances liquidated, no necessity would exist for resort to a court of equity in aid of ascertainment and enforcement, and a suit therefor should have been prosecuted at law. Julian v. Woolbert,
Appellee's insistence is that interest is statutory and runs upon each item of account from its due date. Code 1907, § 4620. If this rule be applied to mutual, unliquidated accounts, it can only be as to ascertained "balance" in money that should have been paid. The balance in favor of complainant could not be ascertained before the reference and its confirmation by the court. Railroad Co. v. Swasey, 23 Wall. 405,
The costs of this appeal will be taxed against appellee Simpson. The decree of the circuit court in equity is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further consideration and decree on reference pursuant to the foregoing.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and SOMERVILLE, JJ., concur.
Addendum
The application for rehearing in this cause, together with brief accompanying same, has been carefully considered, and all the justices concur in the foregoing opinion, and think that the question as to interest was correctly decided in Zadek v. Burnett,
Application for rehearing overruled