60 So. 444 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1912
The trial court at the request of the defendant in writing gave the general affirmative charge, and the appellant (plaintiff below) assigns as error the giving of this charge, and insists that there were, facts affording sufficient inferences before the court on the trial, from which the jury could reasonably find the issues in favor of the plaintiff, and that the court’s action in refusing to submit the case to the jury was unauthorized.
The suit is in trover and case for the conversion of a bale of cotton, and there is no controversy over the facts showing the plaintiff’s right to recover, except that it is contended that the bale of cotton in question was not shown by the evidence to have been raised or grown by the defendant E. A. Lewis, on whose crops for that year the plaintiff had a mortgage lien. The evidence shows that the bale of cotton was in a public warehouse at Alexander City, Tallapoosa county, Ala., and the receipt given by the warehouseman Avas issued to E. A. Lewis as the growler, and subsequently the cotton Avas disposed of to-W. H. Carlisle and C. F. Parks, the parties sued as codefendants with Lewis, and was shipped out of the Avarehouse on the order of these parties. The evidence also shows that the defendant LeAvis was a farmer who conducted his farming operations that year (1907) on lands situated in Tallapoosa county, Ala., where he raised a crop of cotton. The evidence does not show wdio took the bale of cotton to the Avarehouse. The Avarekouseman testified on this point that he could not remember who brought this particular bale of cotton to the Avarehouse, but that he issued the receipt to E. A. Lewds. The receipt was introduced in evidence, and is
Reversed and- remanded.