Winter-Loeb Grocery Co. v. Boykin

82 So. 437 | Ala. | 1919

The complaint as amended contained three counts, the first two being upon a contract for a breach of warranty in the sale of certain seed, and the third was ex delicto; but, as it was charged out by the trial court, we are only concerned with the first two counts upon this appeal.

The amendment did not work an entire change of parties and was permissible. Code 1907, §§ 2490 and 5367. Nor were counts 1 and 2 as amended subject to defendant's demurrer. They disclosed a joint cause of action on the part of L. H. Boykin, the original plaintiff, and his coplaintiffs, as added by way of amendment.

It is unquestionably the law that, in order for two or more parties to join in an action upon a contract, there must be community interest; that is, they must be parties to the same and jointly interested therein, though their interest need not necessarily be equal. It is also settled in this as well as many other jurisdictions that, if Boykin made a contract with the defendant for himself and the other plaintiffs jointly, they may join in an action for the breach of same, notwithstanding the defendant was ignorant of any interest the others had in the contract. McCord v. Love, 3 Ala. 107; 11 Cent. Dig. § 1919; 37 Cent. Dig. § 2347. In order, however, for these plaintiffs to maintain this joint action, the contract that Boykin made must have been made by him for himself and as agent for the other plaintiffs, and not for himself only, with the expectation of advancing or reselling some of the seed to the other plaintiffs. In other words, the other plaintiffs must have been parties to the original purchase — joint vendees with Boykin. If these other plaintiffs were not original vendees of the defendant, but Boykin was the real and sole vendee of the Winter-Loeb Company, and the other plaintiffs were purchasers from or vendees of Boykin, this action cannot be maintained by all of these plaintiffs jointly, and there would be a failure of proof as to a joint cause of action as set out in the complaint. 35 Cyc. 370; Smith v. Williams,117 Ga. 782, 45 S.E. 394, 97 Am. St. Rep. 220; Amer. Digest Dec. vol. 17, §§ 255 and 427; Jackson v. Bush, 82 Ala. 396, 1 So. 175. While there may have been a conflict in the evidence of Boykin and the defendant's salesman as to whether or not there was a straight out sale of the seed or a mere undertaking on the part of the defendant to procure the same, this conflict was made immaterial by the subsequent correspondence and final consummation of the contract of sale. The defendant wrote Boykin an unequivocal offer of sale, which said offer was accepted by Boykin and which involved a different price from the one fixed by the original negotiation, and the sale thus made, of course, carried with it an implied warranty that the seed to be delivered were the kind offered and were not to be mixed with other kind of seed.

The trial court, however, erred in giving the general affirmative charge for the plaintiffs, as it was a question for the jury as to whether or not all the plaintiffs were parties to the contract of sale so as to authorize this joint action. True, Boykin testified that he purchased the seed for himself and these various parties, but it was open for the jury to infer that, while he intended supplying them with seed for planting purposes, they were not parties to the purchase, and that Boykin purchased the same upon his own account, expecting to supply the others himself. While Boykin testified that he bought these seed for himself and the other plaintiffs, he also testified that he used a part of the seed and "sold to these other plaintiffs." Moreover, it was a question for the jury as to the species of seed delivered, as no one examined the seed and proved that they were not the kind bargained for, and the only proof that they were not was based upon the nature and character of the crop grown upon the land *189 where they were planted and which showed a mixture of other products such as Johnson grass, broom corn, sorghum, etc., and while this was relevant and may have been quite convincing evidence that the seed as delivered were mixed, it was not entirely conclusive that the other growths resulted from the sowing of the seed obtained from the defendant. Indeed, it is a matter of common knowledge that Johnson grass and broom corn are quite common in this country, and prolific crops of same are often grown without the necessity of planting same every season; and, from aught that appears from this record, these lands might have been given to the previous growth and production of the other things found mixed with the Texas Ribbon cane. It would have been proper, no doubt, for the plaintiffs to have shown the nature and character of the crops of others using the same kind of seed and procured from a similar source, and for the defendant to have done likewise. Wilcox v. Henderson, 64 Ala. 535. The trial court, however, did not err in declining to admit proof that the dealer in these seed received no complaint from others to whom he had sold similar seed.

There was no express warranty in this cause, and the trial court could have well given the general charge as to count 1; but as to whether or not the refusal of same was reversible error we need not decide, as the case must be reversed for other reasons. It is sufficient to say, for the purpose of another trial, that the proof shows an implied warranty as set out in count 2, and not an express warranty. Grafton Stamps Drug Co. v. Williams, 105 Miss. 296, 62 So. 273.

The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

McCLELLAN, SAYRE, and GARDNER, JJ., concur.

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