87 So. 161 | Ala. | 1920
Under the Code of 1896, § 2814, it is provided that the "suing out of a summons is the commencement of a suit." West v. Engle,
As above noted, the suit was commenced by filing the complaint with the clerk, though of course no order or judgment could have been taken upon same until the defendant was served with process or voluntarily appeared. The cause was placed upon the docket, and at the succeeding term (spring of 1918) was continued. The plaintiff, at the fall term of 1918, while the cause was still pending, procured an order for the issuance of a summons upon the defendant and an alias complaint. This was in no sense an abandonment of the pending or original cause so as to operate as a discontinuance of same, but was merely an effort on the part of the plaintiff to get the cause in shape for the prosecution of same by having the defendant summoned to answer the complaint as originally filed; the alias being intended as a mere duplicate or copy of same. The plaintiff was guilty of no act or omission amounting to an abandonment of the cause, and was not chargeable with the neglect of the clerk in not promptly issuing a summons after he had filed his complaint, and the fact that he obtained an order at the fall term 1918 for a summons and alias complaint indicated a purpose to prosecute his pending cause to a finish, rather than the abandonment of same and the commencement of a new action. Forrester v. Forrester,
Each count of the complaint sufficiently conforms to rules of pleading in cases of this character as heretofore established and approved by this court, and neither of them was subject to the defendant's demurrer. Hamrick v. Shipp,
The trial court did not err in refusing the general charge, as there was evidence affording the jury a reasonable inference of every material fact set forth and relied upon in each count of the complaint.
There was no error in giving the plaintiff's requested charge, which we designate upon the margin of the record as No. 1. A similar charge was approved by this court in the case of Carpenter v. Walker,
There was evidence fully warranting and supporting the verdict of the jury, and under the well-recognized rule established by *130
this court in the case of Cobb v. Malone,
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
McCLELLAN, SOMERVILLE, and THOMAS, JJ., concur.