Oliver v. Camp

62 So. 469 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1913

WALKER, P. J. —

This was an action on the common counts. The count sought to be sustained by evidence was the one for money paid by the plaintiff for the use of the defendant at his request. The evidence for the plaintiff tended to prove that he paid the premium on an accident policy which he as an insurance agent procured to be issued to the defendant; there being evidence tending to prove that the defendant made written application for a policy, and also that he ratified the issuance of the policy by promising to pay the premium after the policy was delivered to him. The evidence for the defendant tended to prove that he did not apply for the policy; that the signature to the application Avas not his; that he did not promise to pay the premium or request the plaintiff to pay it for him; and that,'if the policy Avas ever in his possession at all, it Avas placed in his desk Avithout his knowledge.

The plaintiff offered in evidence an application for an accident insurance policy, “which,” as stated in the bill of exceptions, “purported to have been signed by the defendant, and said Avitness testified that the defendant signed same.” The plaintiff excepted to the action of the court in sustaining an objection of the defendant to *234the admission in evidence of this instrument. The bill of exceptions does not set out the application, or inform us of its contents. We cannot presume that it contained anything having a tendency to support any allegation of the complaint. On the contrary, to support the ruling of the trial court, it may be presumed that it had an opposite tendency; as, for instance, that its terms were such that the policy applied for was not to be effective, and that no premium on it was to be due or payable, except on the written consent of the defendant after the policy was submitted to him for examination. The record does not show that the court was in error in excluding this evidence.

Nor does the record show that the court was in error in sustaining the objection of the defendant to the admission in evidence of a policy of insurance offered by the plaintiff. The policy is not set out in the bill of exceptions, nor is it shown to whom it purported to have been issued. For anything that appears to the contrary, it may have been a policy ‘which was payable to some one who was a stranger to the defendant. It may have been a paper having no apparent connection at all-with any question involved in this case.

An action for money paid does not lie except upon a request on the part of the defendant or his authorized agent. The request may be either express or implied. One’s request of another to make a payment for him may be implied from his subsequent ratification of the payment. — Ross, Adm’r, v. Pearson, 21 Ala. 473; Evans v. Billingsley’s Adm’r, 32 Ala. 395; Mooney & Black v. Parker, 18 Ala. 708; 27 Cyc. 837.

There is nothing in charge 1 given at the request of the defendant which is inconsistent with the propositions just stated. The requirements stated in that charge would be met by proof of a request by the de*235fenclant which was either express or implied. That the plaintiff did not claim, and that the court was not to be understood as ruling, that more ivas required of the idaiutili than to prove that the defendant ratified the payment of the premium made for him by the plaintiff, is indicated by the statement contained in written charge 2 given at the defendant’s request. Certainly the general proposition is correct that a count for money paid by the plaintiff for the defendant at the latter’s request requires for its support evidence of a request by the defendant. The most to be said against the charge under consideration is that it might be regarded as misleading because of its failure to state that the request required to be proved by the plaintiff could be either express or implied. This is not a fault which would make it error for the court to give the charge. It may be presumed that any tendency of the charge to mislead in the particular mentioned would have been obviated by the court’s giving an appropriate explanatory charge if it had been requested to do so.

What has been said disposes of the rulings which have been assigned as errors.

Affirmed.