Ballenger v. Ballenger
Ballenger v. Ballenger
Opinion of the Court
Appellant insists that count 2, for the conversion of the property therein described, must be taken to mean that the alleged con *596 version took place on, to wit, the-day of 1916; that the videlicet (“to wit”) before the averment (“the--day of 1916, 1917, 1918 and 1919”) limited the conversion charged to that committed in the year 1916.
The original counts were filed on December 18, 1919; demurrers thereto filed December 20, 1919, and August 19, 1920; and defendant's pleas of the general issue filed August 19, 1920. Plaintiff’s amended complaint, containing counts 3, 4, and 6, was filed August 19, 1920, and defendant’s motion to strike last-named counts, and answer thereto, were respectively filed on the date of the trial, which was the last-named date. Issue being joined, there was a jury and verdict for the plaintiff, assessing her damages, and the judgment of the court was duly entered thereon.
There is but one proposition for consideration, and that is whether the court erred in allowing the complaint to be amended by adding counts 3, 4, and 6. Byrd v. Hickman, supra; Ala. C. C. & I. Co. v. Heald, 154 Ala. 580, 45 South. 686.
In L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Cofer, 110 Ala. 491, 18 South. 110, it was declared that in an action against a railroad company to recover damages for negligently killing several animals at different times, averred by way of separate counts, such complaint was not demurrable upon the ground of a misjoinder of the several causes of action. Distinct torts of the same nature, and upon all of which the same judgment can be rendered, may be joined in separate counts in the same action, but not in one count. Hitt Lbr. Co. v. Sherman, 189 Ala. 681, 66 South. 639; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Abernathy, 197 Ala. 512, 529, 535, 73 South. 103, and authorities there cited; Code, §§ 5329, 5367. This court has said there was no departure or prejudice by substitution for a defective count, so as to allege the same matters effectively. The original complaint contained counts of like kind and, although it was defective, “there was no error or injury in allowing the original counts to be stricken or abandoned and new ones added.” Rudolph v. Holmes, 201 Ala. 461, 78 South. 839. Such amended complaint related back to the time of filing the original complaint, if it set up no new cause of action, as to which the original complaint did not inform and stop the running of the statute of limitations.
In the original complaint in the case at bar defendant had been given notice that he was called upon to make answer to a claim of damages for the conversion of certain personal property, to wit, mules, a cow, a check for $150, lint cotton and seed out of the same, and 60 bushels of corn converted on, “to wit, the - day of 1916, 1917, 1918 and 1919.” Such conrplaint being demurrable was supplanted, or in effect abandoned, by plaintiff’s filing of amended counts 3, 4, and 6 claiming for the same conversions of corn and cotton for the year 1917, corn and cotton for the year 1918, and for cotton for the year 1919. That is to say, by the several counts added by way of amendment, the claim for damages is made in separate counts for the respective conversions of corn and cotton during the years 1917 and 1918, and for the conversion of cotton during the year 1919. This was permissible undei; our statutes of amendments. Crawford v. Mills, 202 Ala. 62, 79 South. 456.
The complaint as amended related back to the time of the filing of the original complaint — related to the same transactions, property and title, and parties as did the original complaint — and set up no new cause of action of which the original complaint had not given notice, or as to which it had stopped the running of the statute of limitations. Mobile L. & R. Co. v. Portiss, 195 Ala. 320, 70 South. 136; Code 1907, § 5367; Crawford v. Mills, supra. There was no error in overruling defendant’s motion to strike the amended counts 3, 4, and 6. There is no insistence in brief and argument of counsel for appellant for error in overruling demurrer to either count, and as to such ruling on demurrer nothing is presented for review.
The judgment of the cireuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Reference
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- Ballenger v. Ballenger.
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