38 Ala. 703 | Ala. | 1863
The appellant’s bill of exceptions purports to set out all of the evidence, and presents the defendant in the attitude of a party who employs an agent to seize the property of another, without any authority for so doing. One who thus procures an illegal act to be done by another, is a co-trespasser with the party employed to perpetrate the wrong, and is equally responsible with him to the person injured, although not actually present when the trespass is committed ; and the acts and declarations of the agent, in performing such unlawful service, are competent evidence against his principal. It is a familiar princi
As the defendant has made no cross assignment of errors, the questions raised by the bill of exceptions taken by him on the trial are not now before us. Whether the judgment and execution referred to in that bill of exceptions are competent evidence for the defendant; and, if so, whether, in case of the introduction of both, or either of them, in evidence, the rule which makes the act and decla
As the rulings of the circuit court are in conflict with the principles we have laid down, its judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.