58 So. 84 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1912
The appellees brought two suits against the appellant, and the two suits were consolidated and tried as one. The only matter in real dispute between the parties was whether the appellant, which had received three bales of cotton consigned to
It appears from the evidence that appellees were cotton buyers, and that it was the custom for the appellant to make delivery of cotton shipped to appellees at Decatur through the Gulf Compress Company, which owned and controlled a cotton compress at Decatur, and only through such compress company. It appears that, when cotton was shipped to the appellees at Decatur by an arrangement between appellant and the compress company to which the appellees were in no way parties, the cotton was turned over by the defendant to said.compress company, and that said company, for a consideration of 2 cents per bale, notified the consignees of the arrival of the cotton, and delivered it to the consignees. It is therefore apparent that the Gulf Compress Company was, under the undisputed evidence, the agent of the appellant for the purpose of delivering the cotton in controversy to the appellees, and that, if said compress company failed to deliver the cotton, the appellant is liable.
1. During the progress of the trial the appellant, against the objection of the appellees, undertook to get before the jury, as evidence in the case, a certain book which was kept by said compress company, and which purported to contain a record of the cotton received
2. For the purpose of showing that the appellant had received the cotton for the purpose of transporting, and delivering it to the appellees, two bills of lading were introduced. A witness was examined by appellees, who testified that he had been an agent or servant of appellees in and about the purchase of cotton during the year in which the cotton was shipped, and that during such year several hundred bales of cotton had been received by the appellees on bills of lading signed by the same party who signed the bills of lading evidencing the shipment of the cotton in dispute. “The competency of persons to give t-heir opinions as to whether a. given signature is in the proper handwriting of the person it purports to have been made by is not confined to-experts. Any witness Avho has seen the party write, or-who knows his handwriting, may express his opinion as-to the genuineness - of the signature. Of course, the extent of his familiarity with the handwriting will enter-into the weight of the testimony.”—Moon’s Adm’x v. Crowder, 72 Ala. 79.
In addition to the above, the witness further testified that the bills of lading which evidenced the shipment of
3. Under the evidence, the Gulf Compress Company was the agent of the appellant for the delivery of cotton at Decatur. We are therefore unable to see, under .any principle governing* the admission of testimony, Low the books or abstracts or papers of the compress ■company, certainly in the absence of the evidence of the man who kept or made or prepared them, that they ■spoke the truth, could be held to be competent evidence against appellees in a suit between appellees and appellant. Appellees are strangers to such books, papers, and abstracts. It is not claimed that they or any one authorized to represent them kept the books, or had anything to do with the preparation of the abstracts or papers. The court committed no error in excluding the ■abstracts which the defendant attempted to introduce in evidence and in holding that they were not legal evi■dence in the case.—Hart v. Kendall, supra; Walling v. Morgan County, supra.
5. There are several assignments of error as to minor questions which arose during the progress of the trial which we have not considered. Without regard to the question as to whether the court properly ruled on such minor questions, the appellees, under the legal evidence in the case, were entitled to the general affirmative charge, and the rulings of the court on the questions not considered could not have affected the result.
6. Before the expiration of 30 days after the rendition of the judgment, appellant filed a motion for a new trial. It did not call the court’s attention to the motion until after the expiration of 30 days. Under the provisions of the act creating the law and equity court of Morgan county (Laws 1907, p. 170), a judgment rendered in that court becomes, 30 days after its rendition,, possessed of all the qualities of finality possessed by a judgment of a circuit court after the expiration of the term at which it was rendered. The procedure adopted by appellant in filing its motion for a new trial shows conclusively that the motion was not made under section 5372 of the Code of 1907, but under section 2856' of the Code, relating to appeals from the decisions of the city and circuit courts granting or refusing to grant motions for new trials.—Perry v. King, 117 Ala. 533, 23 South. 783. The court, therefore, properly granted appellees’ motion to strike the motion for a new trial.—Southern Ry. Co. v. Griffith, 58 South. 425.
Affirmed.