157 So. 205 | Ala. | 1934
The pivotal question on this appeal relates to the action of the trial court in giving the affirmative charge in favor of the defendant United States Fidelity Guaranty Company on its pleas in abatement. This defendant was surety on the official bond of its codefendant, G. W. Pittman, deputy sheriff, and *381 these pleas rest upon plaintiff's former suit for the recovery of damages growing out of plaintiff's arrest and imprisonment by said deputy, and in which a judgment was recovered on a complaint which had been amended by elimination of all counts except count E charging assault and battery.
While the two suits arose from plaintiff's arrest and imprisonment, yet the causes of action stated therein were not the same. Illustrative is the first count of the present complaint claiming damages for malicious prosecution of plaintiff on a charge of assault and battery, while in the former suit the malicious prosecution count was based upon plaintiff's arrest on a charge of public drunkenness, and the proof shows the two charges were separate and distinct on the court's docket. Manifestly, they are entirely distinct causes of action.
Nor does this defendant insist to the contrary, but rests the sufficiency of its pleas upon the theory that both the present and former actions are ex contractu, for breach of a contract, and that as such several breaches occurred prior to the first suit all should have been embraced therein as stipulated in section 5721, Code 1923, citing McNeil v. Ritter Dental Mfg. Co.,
But as we view the case, the fallacy of defendant's reasoning lies in the assumption that the action is ex contractu. True, the case of Union Indemnity Co. v. Webster,
In Hill v. Hyde,
The complaint in the instant case is neither in form nor substance ex contractu, but states an action in tort against the defendants jointly. The question of its sufficiency against any apt ground of demurrer is not here presented, and, of course, needs no consideration.
Neither defendants' pleas nor the proof offered thereunder suffice to show that plaintiff was prosecuting two actions at the same time and for the same cause (section 5657, Code 1923), and the action is in tort and not on a contract. The provisions of sections 5706 and 5721, Code 1923, upon which defendants rely are without application.
The assignments of error are numerous, and call for no separate treatment. Suffice it to say (leaving aside all other assignments of error), the pleas in abatement were not sustained, and the court committed reversible error in giving the affirmative charge in favor of the surety defendant.
Let the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and BOULDIN and FOSTER, JJ., concur. *382