Williams v. Shows

65 So. 839 | Ala. | 1914

de GRAFFENRIED, J.

The law is well settled that, when one party to a contract has done all that the contract requires him to do, and nothing remains to be done, under the contract, but the payment of a sum of money by the other.party to such contract, then such sum can be recovered by the party to whom such sum is due in an action upon the common counts.—Woodrow v. Hawving, 105 Ala. 240, 16 South. 720.

1. The plaintiff, H. Williams, claims that T. W. Shows, the defendant, is the general manager of and largely interested in a mercantile company; that Charlie Fuller was indebted to said mercantile company in the sum of $321.50, which was secured by a mortgage on certain personal property; that said Charlie Fuller had turned over to said T. W. Shows seven bales of cotton which Shows was to sell and apply the proceeds as a credit upon said indebtedness; that after the cotton had been so delivered, and before it had been sold, and the proceeds credited upon said account of said mercantile company by Shows, the said mercantile company was sued by one Frank Hawkins for said cotton; that while this suit was pending the plaintiff, at the request of Charlie Fuller, paid to Shows for the mercantile company the said sum of $321.50 in full of said indebtedness to said mercantile company, with the express understanding and agreement, participated in and consented to by Charlie Fuller that said cotton or its proceeds was the property of the plaintiff; that Shows was to hold it or its proceeds until the suit against the mercantile company was finally determined; that, if Hawkins won the suit, then the cotton or its proceeds was to be delivered to Hawkins, but that, if the mercantile company won the suit, then that Shows was to deliver the cotton or its proceeds to the plaintiff. In other words, the plaintiff’s theory is that, when he paid the $321.50 to Shows *136for the mercantile company, the indebtedness of Charlie Fuller to the mercantile company was canceled, that the mercantile company, through such payment, and through the contract which Shows, as its general manager, had a right to make, no longer had any interest in the said cotton or its proceeds, and that, under the terms of the contract, Shows became a stakeholder of said cotton or its proceeds. As such stakeholder, he was to deliver the cotton or its proceeds to Hawkins in the event Hawkins won the above-mentioned suit, but, in the event Hawkins lost the said suit, then that Shows, as such stakeholder, was to deliver the cotton or its proceeds to the plaintiff.

There was evidence tending to support the above theory of the plaintiff. The evidence shows that Hawkins lost the above suit. The evidence fails to show what has been done with the proceeds of the cotton; but there was evidence that the plaintiff, before this suit was commenced, demanded the cotton or its proceeds of Shows, and that Shows refused to deliver the cotton or its proceeds to the plaintiff. The plaintiff claims that, when he paid the $321.50 to Shows, it was understood that the cotton or its proceeds, if delivered to him, was to be credited by him on Charlie Fuller’s indebtedness to the plaintiff. There was evidence tending to show that when this case was tried the said $321.50, or a large part of it, was still due the plaintiff by Charlie Fuller.

2. The office of the phase “to wit,” in pleading is to state time, place, number, or manner, which are not of the essence of the matter in issue, so that they may not be required to be proven strictly as laid.—Kilgore & Son v. Shannon & Co., 6 Ala. App. 537, 60 South. 520, and authorities there cited. In the instant case the time when, according to the allegations of the complaint, the plaintiff’s cause of action arose was started *137under a videlicet. There is therefore nothing in the contention of the appellee that the plaintiff was held strictly to the proof of the exact time laid in the complaint as to the day upon which his cause of action arose. The time when the cause of action arose was not of the essence of the plaintiff’s cause of action.

3. In this case we have nothing to do with the question as to the preponderance of the evidence. There was evidence from which the conclusions of fact stated by us at the head of this opinion could have been inferred by a jury. In fact the plaitifl: swore point blank to most of those facts, and when there is a conflict in the evidence, or conflicting inferences to be drawn from the evidence, a case is made for the determination of a jury. A review of all the evidence, with its material conflicts, and with the conflicting inferences which could have been drawn not irrationally from it, convinces us that the trial court committed reversible error in giving to the jury the affirmative charge in behalf of the defendant.

Reversed and remanded.

Anderson, C. J., and McClellan and Sayre, JJ., concur.
midpage