100 Ala. 272 | Ala. | 1893
The suit in this case was instituted against Tbe Singer Sewing Machine Company, a corporation. Before entering upon tbe. trial tbe plaintiff asked and obtained leave of tbe court to strike from tbe name of tbe defendant in tbe summons and complaint tbe words Singer Sewing Machine, and insert in lieu thereof tbe word Manufacturing, so as to show tbe suit was against Tbe Singer Manufacturing Company. This was objected to as being an entire change of tbe party defendant; and tbe objection being overruled, tbe defendant excepted. We think there is nothing in this exception. There was not an entire change of party, but only a correction of a part of tbe corporate name, which bad been misconceived. We do not think tbe change was calculated to deceive or mislead. Tbe case is not brought within tbe principle of Western Railway v. McCall, 89 Ala. 375, nor our other rulings.—Davis Av. R. R. Co. v. Mallon, 57 Ala. 168; Western R. R. Co, v. Davis, 66 Ala. 578.
Tbe tort alleged was, that tbe agent of defendant, without authority or permission from plaintiff, bad entered upon tbe latter’s premises, and had taken and carried away a small lot of seed cotton, tbe property of the latter. The defense consisted in part, of alleged license to do the act complained of, and, in part, of waiver and ratification of tbe act, now complained of as a trespass. Tbe alleged ratification consisted in tbe fact that after tbe cotton was taken, ginned and sold, tbe agent of defendant bad given to plaintiff a receipt against part of a debt plaintiff owed the defendant, for the
per W. H. Sutton Manager.”
The alleged tort was committed in November, 1891, and this suit was brought in March, 1892. There was also testimony tending to show that Anna, wife of plaintiff, and co-maker with Luke of the contract regarding the sewing machine, was present when the cotton was taken, and consented thereto. But there was conflict in the testimony as to the consent.
On the question of ratification or waiver the court charged the jury as follows: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the receipt for $6.10 was given to plaintiff for the proceeds of the sale of the cotton in question, and that the plaintiff, knowing such to be the fact, received such receipt and claimed credit for the amount of said receipt, that this would be a waiver of the alleged tort, if the jury believed from the evidence that any tort had been committed on the part of the defendant, and he would not be entitled to recover.” This charge was manifestly correct, and contains a succinct and clear statement of the law bearing on this feature of the case.
The bill of exceptions, in speaking of the introduction in evidence of the receipt for $6.10 copied above, contains this language: “Here the court (after considerable controversy between counsel as to admissibility of the receipt, defendant’s counsel having inquired for the receipt and sought it out before it had been shown to plaintiff,) remarked in- substance in presence of and hearing of the jury that he did not attach enough importance to the receipt to exclude it; that the defendant could not by sending such receipt through the mail to the plaintiff, an ignorant colored man, release itself from liability for the commission of its alleged tort, if a
We do not find testimony that Luke Green, or Greenleaf, was a colored man. Possibly his presence before the jury furnished proof of this. Nor is there testimony in the record tending to show in what manner the receipt was sent to the plaintiff. But independently of these considerations, the remarks of the. court reflected unfavorably on the weight of the evidence, and were an invasion of the province of the jury. The receipt being legal evidence, its weight, considered in connection with all the other testimony, was a question exclusively for the determination of the jury. For this error the judgment of the Circuit Court must be reversed. Hair v. Little, 28 Ala. 236; Carter v. State, 33 Ala. 429; Belisle v. Clark, 49 Ala. 98; Boddie v. State, 52 Ala. 395; Furhman v. Mayor, 54 Ala. 263; Crawford v. McLeod, 64 Ala. 240.
Reversed and remanded.