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de GRAFFENRIED, J. The following is the declaration upon which this case was tried, and upon which a judgment was rendered against one Prince and the appellant Norton:
“Count 2. Plaintiff claims of defendants a like sum of $125, for that heretofore, to wit, on the 14th day of November, 1911, the plaintiff had a lien upon two certain bales of cotton, which, or plaintiff’s landlord’s lien on which, the defendants on or about said date did wrongfully dispose of and make way with. And plaintiff avers that for the year 1911 the said R. L. Prince was a tenant of plaintiff’s upon and with respect to a certain plantation known as the Orendorff place, located near Hillsboro; and in Lawrence county, Ala.; that the rent of the said plantation, which the said R. L. Prince was to pay to the plaintiff for the year 1911, amounted to a large sum of money, to wit, the sum of $625. And plaintiff avers that said rent to the extent of more than $100 the said defendant Prince failed to pay or satisfy. And plaintiff further avers that said Prince, in the year 1911, raised a large amount of cotton on said plantation, on which the plaintiff had a
*510 lien, as landlord under the laws of the state of Alabama. Said cotton was sold and made way with by defendants, whereby plaintiff’s rent was wholly lost to her, and her lien defeated and destroyed; hence this suit.”“Plaintiff amends second count of complaint by averring that defendants took charge of and disposed of the cotton in Decatur, Ala., whereby plaintiff lost her lien thereop, to wit, two bales of cotton raised on said plantation and brought to Decatur, Ala., by said R. L. Prince and one Patterson, and taken to the compress by said Patterson and defendant Norton, and by striking out those parts.”
1. Courts of last resort, in passing upon questions presented by demurrer, must, out of necessity, resolve themselves into critics, and must occasionally point out the inadvertent lapse of some counsel into' such obscurity of expression in some pleading as to destroy its potency. In one of our own cases the learned justice— and he was a most excellent judge — who wrote the opinion for the court, said: “When there is no generally received English pronunciation of the names as one and the same, and the difference in sound is not SO' slight as to be scarcely perceptible, the doctrine of idem son-ans cannot be applied without the aid of extrinsic evidence, unless when sound and power are given to the letters, as required .by the principles of pronunciation, the names have the same pronunciation or sound.”— Munkers v. State, 87 Ala. 94, 6 South. 357.
The quoted language from the above case, no doubt, gives a correct definition of idem sonans, but, to use the language of Mayfield’s Digest (see 1 Mayfield, p. 417, subd. 9, and note), the “statements seem confused.”
(1) That'the above declaration upon which this case was tried is, growing out of the amendment, subject to the criticism that its statements are “confusing,”*511 there can be no doubt. What the plaintiff meant to strike out of the second count of the complaint above quoted we do not know. All that we know is that she struck out “those parts.” This case must be, for reasons set out below, again tried, and, as this is true, we deem it necessary to only call attention to the condition of the complaint as it now exists. It can, of course, be so amended upon the next trial as to meet the requirements of good pleading.(2) 2. There was evidence in this case tending to show that the defendant Norton had m> knowledge of the existence of the plaintiff’s lien upon the cotton at the time of the alleged destruction of the lien. There was evidence tending to show that Prince, the tenant, was sick on the day of the alleged destruction of the lien, and that all that Norton did with reference to the cotton was done without the knowledge of the landlord’s lien, and that it was innocently done as a friend of Prince and out of respect to the fact that Prince was sick. Of course, if Prince used Norton as an innocent instrument in disposing of the cotton, then Norton, the victim of misplaced confidence, is not liable to the plaintiff. If Prince was sick, and Norton, as his friend, without knowledge of the existence of the plaintiff’s lien or of facts which upon reasonable inquiry would have placed him in possession of that knowledge, innocently carried the cotton to the compress, received tickets for and samples of the cotton, and innocently offered that cotton for sale or innocently sold it, and Prince received the proceeds, then certainly Norton is not liable to the plaintiff. An action on the case is an equitable action, and, under the circumstances named, the plaintiff would not be entitled to a judgment against Norton. — Teat v. Chapman & Co., 1 Ala. App. 491-498,*512 56 South. 267; Foxworth v. Brown Bros., 120 Ala. 59, 21 South. 1.The case of Leuthold v. Fairchild, 35 Minn. 99-111, 27 N. W. 503, 28 N. W. 218, cited in 1 Jaggard on Torts, p.287, seems to be decisive of the above proposition. The complaint alleges a wrongful disposition of the cotton, and if Norton acted without knowledge of the existence of the plaintiff’s lien, or was not possessed of facts putting him on inquiry as to plaintiff’s lien, then, in so far as he is concerned, the disposition of the cotton cannot be said to have been wrongful. — Leuthold v. Fairchild, supra,.
3. The legal principles governing cases of this sort are simple and plain, and we deem it unnecessary to discuss any of the other questions presented by this record. Many of the rulings of the trial court were not in accordance with the above views, and for that reason the judgment- of the court below is reversed, and the cause is remanded to that court for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
McClellan, Sayre, and Gardner, JJ., concur.
Document Info
Citation Numbers: 191 Ala. 508, 67 So. 683, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 771
Judges: Gardner, Graffenried, McClellan, Sayre
Filed Date: 11/7/1914
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024