72 So. 80 | Ala. | 1916
The action is in trover, to recover damages for the conversion of a cow. To this count was added a count claiming on an account stated, which latter count, however, need not be noticed, as no question is raised as to it, or as to joinder of counts, The plaintiff’s theory of the case was that defendant had wrongfully, if not feloniously, taken plaintiff’s cow and converted it to his own use, by slaughtering it and selling the beef in defendant’s beef market. It was shown without dispute that defendant was a butcher, and that he made some claim to the cow in question under a mortgage executed by plaintiff’s grandson; but there- was no claim that the grandson had any right to mortgage plaintiff’s cow. Defendant did not, however, attempt to defend by virtue of the mortgage, but he denied converting the cow, or authorizing his butchers to convert it, to his own use.
There was ample evidence to carry the case to the jury, both upon the theory that defendant himself converted the cow, and upon the theory that his agents converted it to the defendant’s
Another witness testified as follows: “My name is Tom Lawless. I know Mrs. Limblad and Robert Ward. I was present at the time there was a conversation between Mrs. Limblad and Mr. Ward in regard to killing the cow. I was in Mr. Ward’s meat shop one day to get some meat, when Mrs. Limblad walked in right behind me and asked Mr. Ward if he killed her cow. He said, ‘No,’ he did not kill her cow, but he had her killed; that she was killed in his slaughter pen. ■ Mr. Ward said he did not know it was her cow; that he got it from Garland George. Mrs. Limblad told him that he knew it was not Garland George’s cow, because he had been to her to buy the cow, and she would not sell it.”
Affirmed.