85 So. 390 | Ala. | 1920
Lead Opinion
Trial of the right of property. An attachment in favor of appellant to collect rent and advances being levied on farm animals and crops on premises belonging to appellant and occupied by J. F. Herring, appellee, wife of defendant in attachment, interposed a claim to the property, and a jury found with her. Appellant claimed that he had let the premises to Herring, and that the latter was indebted to him in a considerable sum on account of advances to him (consisting in the main of an old debt due by defendant to a bank and assumed by plaintiff) and one-third of the crop as rent. Claimant's testimony that she owned the live stock was undisputed, and it also appeared without contradiction that claimant and her children had raised the crops, so that the trial of the issue whether the crops were liable for the husband's debt resolved itself into a contest as to whether the claimant *333 occupied the premises as subtenant under her husband, as appellant claimed, or as tenant in chief under appellant, as the claimant, appellee, claimed.
Under the statute (section 4744 of the Code), crops raised by a subtenant are liable to the lien of the original landlord, though there is no privity of contract between them. Bain v. Wells,
Section 5351 of the Code of 1907 is but an affirmation of a rule of the common law. Under that rule it was a matter of discretion with the trial judge whether the case should be reopened at appellant's request for the purpose of allowing him to introduce additional evidence to the effect that the claimant held as tenant in chief under him. The evidence which appellant thus sought to get before the jury, after the court had refused appellant's request for the general charge, was a deposition of the claimant, in answer to interrogatories propounded to her by appellant under the statute, and we must presume that it had all along been on the file, and was accessible to appellant without trouble or delay. This discretion should be exercised for the advancement of the ends of justice, and appellate courts have gone far in their denial of control over the discretion when used to admit evidence. Walker v. Walker,
Some parts of the court's oral charge are assigned for error, but such assignments cannot be considered, for the reason that no exceptions were reserved at the trial. McPherson v. State,
Assignments numbered from 11 to 18, both inclusive, are based upon the action of the court in overruling the motion for a new trial. The motion depended upon points already noticed.
There is an argument in support of the tenth assignment of error; but there is no tenth assignment of error.
We find no error.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and GARDNER, JJ., concur.
Addendum
Upon further consideration the court is of opinion that, if it should be conceded that there was a scintilla of evidence from which the jury may have inferred that claimant was Mooneyham's tenant, still the great weight of the evidence so overwhelmingly supported the plaintiff's contention that said claimant was a subtenant under the defendant in attachment, her husband, that it was error to overrule the motion of plaintiff in attachment for a new trial.
Further, appellee, claimant, contends that she was entitled to the general charge for the reason that the execution in favor of plaintiff was insufficient to make out a prima facie case because there was no proof of the validity of the attachment writ — this on the authority of Weinstein v. Yielding,
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN, SAYRE, and GARDNER, JJ., concur. *334