Judges: Gbaffenried
Filed Date: 12/21/1911
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
This suit was brought by the appellant against the appellee on a certain promissory note made by the appellee to appellant for certain commercial fertilizers sold by appellant to appellee.
When the appellant introduced the defendant’s note in evidence, it made out a prima facie right to recover the face of the note, interest, and, upon proof of their value, its attorney’s fees, for the payment of which by the -appellee the note provided. If there existed any good and sufficient reason Avhy the appellant should not recover, the Iuav cast the duty upon the defendant to sIioav such reason by legal evidence. The appellee claimed that he should not be required to pay. the price he had agreed to pay for the fertilizer, but should be required to pay only one-half of that amount, because, according to his contention, the fertilizer sold him Avas deficient in some of its ingredients, as guaranteed or branded on the sacks, and that, by reason of such deficiency, the commercial value
Section 44 of the Code provides the method whereby any purchaser of fertilizer or fertilizer material may obtain, through the officials of the state, and at the state’s expense, a complete analysis of the particular lot of fertilizer obtained by him; and it is provided in this section that “such official analysis shall be admissible as evidence in any of the courts of the state on the trial of any issue involving the merits of the pa/rtieular lot of fertilizer or fertilizer material so sampled and analyzed.”
While the analysis provided for in the above section 44, when introduced in evidence on the trial of a cause involving the merits of the particular lot of fertilizer so analyzed, is not made conclusive evidence of its correctness, nevertheless, as the analysis is made by trained and impartial officials of the state, such evidence, when introduced on the trial of a cause, would naturally carry with it much probative force. The appellant did not take advantage of section 44 and have his fertilizer analyzed; and he undertook to show that the fertilizer sold to him by appellant fell more than 5 per cent, below its commercial value, as shown by the brands on the sacks containing it, in the following manner: He introduced the record of the official analysis made of the fertilizer manufactured by appellant, as provided in section 434 of the Code. This record
The fact that the appellant had fertilizer which was 11 per cent, below its guaranteed analysis and other
“A verdict is not a true verdict, the result of any arbitrary rule, or order, whether imposed by themselves, or by the court or officer in charge.”—Southern Railway Co. v. Williams, 113 Ala. 620, 21 South. 328.
There was no evidence in this case tending, in the remotest degree, to show that the lot of fertilizer from which analysis described in the above qestion “test No. 231e” and the lot from which analysis described as “test No. 298h” were ever mixed together, and, if so mixed, in what proportions, and the court was clearly in error in permitting the question to he asked the witness, and also in permitting the witness to answer the same.
It follows from Avhat we have above said that this cause, for the error pointed out, must be reversed and remanded. It also follows that, in our opinion, under the evidence as it exists in the bill of exceptions, the appellee failed to sustain his plea of tender.
Reversed and remanded.