McLendon v. Grice

BRICKELL, C. J.

Neither the record proper nor the judgment entry in this cause shows upon what issues the cause was tried. The bill of exceptions, however, recites that a plea of the general issue and a special plea of justification under legal process were filed, and its whole tenor shows that the matters urged by both parties and considered by the court, upon which the assignments of error are based, were such as could properly have been presented only under the special plea of justification. On the authority of Brinson v. Edwards, 94 Ala. 451, a precisely similar case, the cause will be treated as having been tried on said issue.

The action was instituted by appellee against appellant and the sureties on his official bond, as sheriff, to recover damages for the wrongful levy of a writ of attachment, sued out against one Lanier, upon a stock of goods which plaintiff claims to have purchased from Lanier a few days before the attachment Avas sued out, at a valuation of $631.61, in part payment of a past indebtedness of a greater amount. A part of this indebtedness, amounting to $612, was secured by two mortgages upon the same stock of goods, executed at different times, to secure a loan of different sums aggregating said amount, which mortgages were recorded within a day or two after their execution. At the time of the transaction plaintiff and Lanier were engaged in business in adjoining buildings, and Lanier, in addition *516to liis mercantile business, conducted a pool table, the entire business being under tbe management of his clerk, J T. Windsor, Lanier himself being absent most of the time. After the alleged purchase, plaintiff employed Windsor to continue to manage his business as before, the goods not being removed until seized, a few days after the sdle, by the sheriff. The evidence tended to show that plaintiff was largely indebted at the time he claims to have made the loans to Lanier, and that the latter had no property besides the stock of goods, so far as plaintiff knew, to which he could look for payment, except a claim which Lanier told him he had against a railroad company.

If there was any error in excluding the. question propounded to plaintiff on cross-examination as to whether, after his purchase of the stock of goods, and the employment of Windsor, the latter “did not continue to look after the pool table in connection with the goods, just as he had previously done,” the error was cured by the subsequent admission of the testimony of Windsor, which answered affirmatively the question excluded. A. G. S. R. Co. v. Frazier, 93 Ala. 45; Eastis v. Montgomery, 93 Ala. 293. The trial court may at any time before the evidence closes permit a witness to correct, explain or limit his previously given testimony, or to rebut the effect of the testimony of one of his own witnesses, although he thereby contradicts his own previous testimony. Hence it was not error to permit plaintiff, who on direct examination had testified that he had made no trade with Lanier concerning the pool table, to state in rebuttal, after evidence had been offered tending to show that there had been some trade made concerning the table, that Lanier told him the table belonged to a third person, but that he could use it until it was called for by the owner, and apply the income arising therefrom to the payment of the balance due on his indebtedness. It was no good ground of objection to the admission of this testimony that defendant was not allowed, on the examination in chief, to cross-examine plaintiff on the same subject, since he had every opportunity to cross-examine him after the admission of the testimony in rebuttal. Plaintiff was permitted to testify in rebuttal, in answer to a question propounded by his counsel, and against defendant’s ob*517jection, that at the time he loaned to Lanier the sum of $450 the latter told him that “the Ala. Mid. Railway Oo. owed him the money and that he would be able to pay him Avhen the note became due.” In Anew of the theory of the defense that the indebtedness of Lanier to plaintiff AATas simulated, and of that tendency of the evidence, brought out by defendant, which would justify an argument based upon the improbability of plaintiff’s lending so large a sum to one Avho had no other property or means of payment except the small stock of goods, upon Avhich he already held a mortgage, the testimony objected to Avas admissible as tending to explain aAvay this improbability. It Avas not, of course, admissible to sIioav t'he fact of the railroad company’s indebtedness to Lanier, but only for the purpose stated.

The charge given by the court at the request of the plaintiff Avas evidently intended to assert the proposition that if the goods Avere reeeiAred by plaintiff in absolute payment or part payment of a bona fide debt, not less in amount than the fair market Aulue of the goods, and if no benefit aauis reserved to Lanier, the sale was valid. There Avas no error in the instruction. The charge requested by defendant Avas properly refused. The mere fact that, at the time the indebtedness of Lanier to plaintiff Avas created, the former agreed to pay usurious interest, did not vitiate the subsequent transaction resulting in the sale of the goods. The testimony shows that the debt without any usurious interest was greater than the value of the stock of goods, and it is only when usurious interest is included and alloAved in order to swell t'he amount of the debt so that it avüI equal or approximate the value of the property, that the transaction will be declared fraudulent on account of the usury. — Harris v. Russell, 93 Ala. 59; Lehman v. Greenhut, 88 Ala. 478. Let the judgment be affirmed.

Affirmed.