50 So. 598 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1912
This suit was instituted in the name of the Mobile Electric Company, and its object was to recover damages for coal claimed to have been lost from a number of car loads of coal received by the appellee (defendant below) as a common carrier for delivery at Mobile. The several shipments were made by
We are of opinion that that ruling is supported by the decisions made in the cases of Louisville & Nash
But it is suggested that it is not alone the right of the nominal plaintiff which is to be considered in determining whether the action is sustainable under the evidence, as the statute (Code, § 2490) provides that “in all cases where suits are brought in the name of the person having the legal right for the use of another, the beneficiary must be considered as the sole party on the recordand it is urged that the Mobile Electric Company was the owner of the coal, and that the suit could have been maintained in its name. The question as presented will be considered, though the assumption, is indulged that the nominal plaintiff was “the person having the legal right.” We cannot concur in the view that the fact of the existence at the time the shipment was made of a contract between the shipper and the electric company, the terms of which contemplated deliveries by the former to the latter, or to a carrier for it, f. o b. at the mines of the former, is entitled to be given such effect as to make the electric company the owner from the time a shipment was made of coal consigned by the coal company, not to the electric company, but to the coal company’s own agent at Mobile, or in effect to itself. The decision made in the case of Capehart v. Furnam Farm Improvement Co., 103 Ala. 671, 16 South. 627,
The conclusion is that the evidence offered did not show a right of recovery in either the nominal or the beneficial plaintiff, and that the court did not err in sustaining the defendant’s motion to exclude that evidence. In view of this conclusion, it is not material to inquire whether a proposed amendment of the complaint by striking out the nominal plaintiff should have
Affirmed.