Forrester & Brother v. J. A. May Co.

Alabama Court of Appeals
Forrester & Brother v. J. A. May Co., 3 Ala. App. 281 (1911)
57 So. 64; 1911 Ala. App. LEXIS 142
Walker

Forrester & Brother v. J. A. May Co.

Opinion of the Court

WALKER, P. J.

The property alleged to have been converted had belonged to Y. J. Forrester & Bro., who made a conditional sale of it to Shinholster Bros.; the contract of sale providing that no title to the property should pass to the purchasers until they had fully performed the terms of the contract. The claim of the plaintiffs (appellants here) to the property rests upon-an alleged sale by Forrester & Bro. of their interest in the property, after the death of a member of the firm of Shinholster Bros., and the failure in business of that firm; while the contention of the appellee is that, before that alleged sale was made, it had already pur*283chased from Forrester & Bro. their interest in the property. The case turns upon the inquiry whether what occurred between W. H. Forrester, a member of the firm of Forrester & Bo., and J. A. May, representing the appellee, on the occasion of an interview between them at Shinholster Bros.’ mill, amounted to a. sale to the appellee by Forrester & Bro. of their interest in the property. According to the testimony of W. H. Forrester, examined as a witness for the plaintiffs, he offered to sell the property for cash, but when May said that he did not have the money there the witness “then told him it was all off then.” On the other hand, the testimony offered by the defendant tended to show that a sale was then consummated, the price being agreed upon and the property delivered, under an agreement that the price would be paid on the return of May to town. Plainly there was no merit in the objections made to questions asked the witness Forrester, on his cross-examination, as to the details of the conversation between him and May, in reference to which the witness had testified.

The questions asked the same witness on his cross-examination, in reference to the plaintiffs paying him more for the property than the defendant claimed to have agreed to pay for it, were not subject to the objections interposed to them, as they had a tendency to disclose a motive or interest on the part of the witness to claim that a sale of the property to the defendant had not been made.

Without regard to the propriety of that- ruling, it is apparent that the plaintiffs were not harmed by the action of the court in sustaining an objection to a question to the same witness objecting to the moving of the property when he saw it in the possession of agents of the defendant during the night following the day *284of the Interview between the witness and May, as- the witness afterwards was permitted to detail what was said on the occasion inquired about.

As to the rulings on the objections to two questions asked the plaintiff’s witness A. M. Grimsley on his cross-examination, it is enough to say that the first question was not subject to objection, as it merely called for a detail of a matter in reference to- which the witness had deposed on his direct examination; and that his answer to the second question negatived the existence of the fact which the defendant, in asking the question, was seeking to elicit.

Under the rule which forbids leading questions on the direct examination of a witness, the assignments of error, based upon the action of the court in sustaining objections of the defendant to questions which the plaintiffs asked their witness A. M. Grimsley when he was recalled, cannot be sustained.

J. A. May, in proceeding to- detail what occurred between him and W. H. Forrester at the mill of Shin-holster Bros, in reference to the property in question, and immediately following his statement that “something passed between me and Mr. Forrester,” was asked the question, “Who- came to you about it?” The form of the question did not indicate that it sought to elicit illegal evidence, nor what response the Avitness was -expected to make to it. This being true, the court is not to be put in error for overruling the objection to the question. If the plaintiffs regarded the answer to the question as irrelevant or immaterial evidence, objection should have been made to the answer, and the exception -directed against its admission in evidence.—Tolbert v. State, 87 Ala. 27, 6 South. 284.

The interview betAveen Forrester and May in regard to the sale of the property in question occurred in the country. The evidence for the defendant was to the *285effect that when the terms of sale were agreed on May remarked that he did not have a check or the money with him, hut would pay the price on their return to Dothan, to which suggestion Forrester assented, and May thereupon took charge of the property, and had it removed. “If the goods are put into- the possession of the buyer on the understanding or agreement that he will pay for them immediately, and he fails or refusees to do so, the seller may recover the goods.”—Shines v. Steiner, 76 Ala. 548; Drake v. Scott, 136 Ala. 621, 33 South. 873, 96 Am. St. Rep. 25. It was proper to admit proof of a tender of the agreed price made in behalf of the defendant, upon the return of May to Do-than, in order to negative the conclusion that the seller, by the failure or refusal of the buyer to make payment as stipulated, acquired any right to recover or reclaim the property.

We discover no error in the rulings of the court in giving or refusing instructions to the'jury. The suggestion of the counsel for the appellant that there was error in the written charge given at the instance of the defendant, in that it involved the unwarranted assumption that there, was evidence tending to show a purchase by the defendant of the papers evidencing the title of Forrester Bros, to the property in question, when the only evidence of a purchase was as to a purchase of the property, is not only hypercritical, but is based upon a misconception of the evidence as set out in the bill of exceptions. J. A. May expressly stated that his conversation with Forrester at the mill was “about taking up the paper.” Whether in that conversation the parties to it spoke of the “property” or of the “papers” held by Forrester Bros., it was apparent that the subject dealt with was the interest of that firm iia the property in question.

Affirmed.

Reference

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