DocketNumber: 7 Div. 741.
Citation Numbers: 92 So. 236, 18 Ala. App. 350, 1921 Ala. App. LEXIS 275
Judges: Sameord
Filed Date: 11/15/1921
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The complaint was in four counts, claiming on the' common counts, for account, account stated, services rendered, and money had and received; the elainubeing for services rendered as deputy sheriff to the defendant as sheriff of Cherokee county. The defendant, besides the pleas of nonassumpsit and payment, filed pleas- 3, 4, and 5. Plea 3 was a plea to the effect that the claim was for services rendered on an entire contract, which the plaintiff, without fault on the part of defendant, had failed to perform. Pleas 4 and 5 were in effect pleas setting up the statutes of fraud, in that the contract upon which plaintiff’s claim is based was not in writing and not to be performed within a year. Demurrers to these pleas being overruled, plaintiff’s replications to plea 3 setting up first a general denial and second alleging a breach of the contract by defendant as a cause for its termination, demurrer to this replication was overruled. Plaintiff also replied to plea 4, to the effect that under the contract he performed certain services for defendant, which defendant accepted to his benefit, etc.
Aside from plea 3 and the issue raised under it the issues made by the pleadings are: A claim for services rendered; a plea that the services rendered were rendered under a contract, void under the statute of frauds; a reply admitting the invalidity of the contract, but alleging part performance of the service and its acceptance by defendant.
Plea 5 seems to have been completely ignored in the trial and the judgment entry recites the issues entirely eliminating this plea. But this is of no consequence, as the is-sues as framed embrace every defense set out in plea 5.
The court refused to give at the request of the defendant in writing the following-charge :
“The court charges the jury that you would not be authorized to consider any terms of the agreement of these parties in reaching your conclusion as to the reasonable value of the services of the plaintiff.”
Charge 3, reguested in writing by the defendant, was properly refused, for the reason that it misplaced the burden of proof. The burden was on the plaintiff in the first instance, but, having been met, the burden of proving payment was on defendant. The charge was bad.
Any testimony showing or tending to show what work plaintiff did or had done was admissible, whether the arrangement to have the work done or the work was done in the presence of the defendant or not.
We find no reversible error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
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