Burgess v. American Mortgage Co.

HARALSON, J.

1. The suit was by attachment, commenced by appellee against appellant. The character of the attachment, and upon what property levied, is not disclosed. The complaint contains two counts, the first of which alleged one hundred and fifty dollars to be “due by an account for the rent of land in Pike county, Alabama, known as the Burgess place, for the year 1895, with interest thereon from December 25th, 1895,” with additional averment “that said rent was due plaintiff, on, to-wit, Dec. 25, 1895.”

The defendant, if a mere trespasser, and if he occupied the land as such, could be made liable, if at all, in action of trespass to recover damages for his tortious entry and holding of the premises.—Weaver v. Jones, 24 Ala. 423. If he occupied under a contract, definite as to the time of renting, and amount to be paid, he was liable in assumpsit on the contract, the form of action being prescribed in the Code. — Form 30, p. 795. Or, if not falling in either of these categories of liability, and coining within one of the three defined cases provided in section 2715 of the Code, an action for use and occupation might be sustained against him, as per form 31 of the Code. That section provides for the maintenance of this action, — in the first and third cases specified,— “when there has been a demise by deed, or by parol, and no specific sum agreed on as rent; ’ ’ or, ‘ ‘when the tenant remains on the land by the sufferance of the owner.” It has been settled, that “the conventional relation of landlord and tenant, or an entry into possession and occupancy by permission of the owner, and in recognition of and in subordination to his title, under circumstances from which a tenancy may be implied, is indispensable to the maintenance of the action in the first and third classes of cases; ’ and that a principle common to all the classes is, “that there must exist a relation between the parties founded on an express or implied contract, which estops the defendant from drawing the title of the owner into the controversy.”—Powell v. New Eng. Mortg. Sec. Co., 89 Ala. 491; Grady v. Ibach & Co., 94 Ala. 152, and authorities there cited.

The first count in the complaint, is manifestly bad. Ignoring the form prescribed, — which it is safer, generally, in practice to follow, — it fails to aver that the lands were demised by the plaintiff to the defendant in *472the year specified, and is no more than an action on an open account for rent for the year 1895. It was liable to the demurrer interposed in its first ground. The other grounds, having reference to the lack of averment in respect to the crop grown on the rented land and the lien thereon, are, under the facts set out, unintelligible. It does not appear that the attachment was to enforce a crop lien. ■

The second count, as for the objections raised to it by the demurrer, was good.

2. The evidence on which the plaintiff relied for a verdict was, that in the year 1887, the defendant and his wife executed a mortgage to plaintiff on the land, out of which the rent sued for in this case grew, to secure a loan by plaintiff to defendant of $1,000, which mortgage was foreclosed in the year 1892, and plaintiff became the purchaser at the foreclosure sale, and held the auctioneer’s certificate, and that the time for defendant to redeem expired on the 14th November, 1894, and he had not redeemed ; that afterwards, in February, 1895, the plaintiff brought an action óf unlawful detainer in a justice’s court, to recover from defendant the possession of said land, which was determined in favor of plaintiff, and on appeal to the circuit court, it was tried on a question of fact as to whether or not proper demand had been made in writing before suit brought, and whether the defendant had rented the lands before suit, and a verdict and judgment were rendered in favor of defendant; that on the trial of that case, the defendant testified in his own behalf, that early in January, 1895, and before the unlawful detainer suit was brought, he rented said land from John D. Gardner, and agreed to pay him $150 for the rent of it for the year 1895; and it was “shown that at the time, said John D. Gardner was the attorney of the plaintiff and its agent, to the extent of having authority from plaintiff to rent said land and bind the plaintiff thereby.”

The defendant sought to defend on the ground that he had not rented the land from plaintiff or its agent. He testified in his own behalf, as he had done in the unlawful detainer suit, that lie rented said land in January, 1895, for the sum of $150, from the said John D. Gardner. He was then asked the questions by his counsel: ‘ ‘State whether or not said Gardner represented *473to you at the time you rented said land, that he was the agent of the plaintiff? Did he or not represent to you, that he was not the agent of the plaintiff? State whether or not lie did represent to you that he was the agent of another person, and whether or not another and different person purchased said land, at the foreclosure sale? And that he was the agent of such other person ? And did you or not rent the land from Gardner as the agent of such other person? State whether or not you ever rented said land from the plaintiff or its agent?” It is stated, that each of these questions was objected to by counsel for plaintiff as they were severally asked, and the court sustained each objection, and the defendant excepted separately to each ruling as it was made. What the objections were is not stated, and they are to be taken as general. The general rule in reference to the admission or rejection of evidence is, that the party taking a bill of exceptions must affirmatively show error to his prejudice, or the proceedings will not be disturbed.—Burns v. The State, 49 Ala. 373. We can not presume, in order to put the court in error, that the answers to these questions, if they had been made, would have been legal evidence.—Bedwell v. Bedwell, 77 Ala. 589 ; Perry v. Danner, 74 Ala. 485 ; Allen v. The State, 73 Ala. 23. Besides, it had been shown, that John D. Gardner, whose statements of a transaction between him and the defendant, sought to be introduced by answer to these questions, was dead, and that he was the agent of the plaintiff at the time he rented the lands to defendant, having authority to rent them. Any statement, therefore, as to the transaction with, or statement by the deceased, who acted in a representative capacity, at the time, for the plaintiff, was not legal or proper evidence, if objected to, and there was no error in its exclusion so far as has been made to appear. Code of 1886, § 2765, as amended, Acts 1890-91, p. 557.

The other questions propounded to defendant by his counsel, set out on page 5 of the abstract, do not appear to have been objected to or answered, and can not be made the basis of an assignment of error.

There is no merit in the 3d assignment of error. The plaintiff by the uncontradicted evidence, had made out his case, and there was no error in giving the general charge as requested in his favor.

Affirmed,