The plaintiff contends, and his evidence tends to support his contention, that he puchased from the defendant a new Maxwell car; that it was represented to him by the defendant or its duly authorized agent as such; that, relying upon this statement, he paid the defendant the price agreed upon, which was $700, either in money or in property which was agreed at the time to be worth that much, and which the defendant accepted as $700; that the car delivered was not a new car, but was a used car and damaged; that, when plaintiff discovered the deceit, he rescinded the trade, so notified the defendant, and demanded the return of his property or money, and defendant refused to return same. The defendant denied the false representations, and denied that it had ever had any dealings with plaintiff at all, but claimed that it was a Mississippi corporation, not authorized to do business in this state, and that whatever trade had been made or transaction had with plaintiff was by one R.W. Fagan, the defendant's president. Fagan, the president, so testified, but further admitted that he was in the active management of defendant's business, that of selling automobiles; that the car sold and *Page 471 delivered to plaintiff was the property of defendant before he sold it to plaintiff; that the defendant company having no license to do business in this state and not having complied with the statutes of this state, in regard to license, that he carried on this business over in Alabama as an individual, and that he was responsible to the corporation for the business; that he simply paid the money over to it when the sales were made; that in the sale of this car the proceeds were turned into defendant's business; that he did not tell the plaintiff that he was doing business individually or for the corporation. Under the evidence, it was a question for the jury to say whether the representations were made; if so, where they false, and whether or not R. W. Fagan was acting for himself or as president of the defendant company, merely using a subterfuge to evade the corporation laws of this state.
Count A was subject to the demurrer interposed, but the evidence is without conflict that, if plaintiff was entitled to recover at all, recovery could be had on the common counts as filed, upon which issue was joined. This being true, and the only issue under the complaint being as to the amount thus due, prejudicial error cannot be imputed to the action of the trial court in overruling demurrer to a special count which imperfectly sets up the plaintiff's claim, when this count claimed no more than the amount shown by the evidence to be recoverable under the common counts, and the evidence for plaintiff sustained every allegation necessary to a recovery under such counts. Barnes v. Marshall, 193 Ala. 94, 69 So. 436; Kellar v. Jones Weedon, 196 Ala. 417, 72 So. 89
Count B is in the Code form and is sufficient.
The third, fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh assignments of error are not insisted upon in brief, and therefore are waived.
There was evidence tending to show that Fagan was acting for the corporation, and, under this phase of the evidence, charge 2 as requested by the defendant was misleading, and its refusal was not error. Brooklyn L. Ins. Co. v. Bledsœ, 52 Ala. 538; Citizens' Nat. Bank v. Buckheit, 14 Ala. App. 511,71 So. 82.
Charge 3 as requested by defendant was bad, in that it gave undue prominence to the testimony of the witness Fagan and was also argumentative. Its refusal was not error.
Charge 5 was misleading, and this question was fully covered by the court in its oral charge.
Charge 8 was fully covered by the court's oral charge, and its refusal as requested was not error.
The questions in this case, as to whether a fraud had been practiced on plaintiff, and as to whether such practice was by the defendant or its president and manager, acting individually, were questions of fact for the jury, and from the testimony as disclosed by the bill of exceptions there was ample evidence to sustain the verdict, and therefore the motion for a new trial was properly overruled.
While Fagan did not confess that he was doing the business individually to avoid paying corporation taxes, he did testify that his company had no license to do business in Alabama; that it had not complied with the corporation laws of this state, and for that reason he carried on this business in Alabama as an individual; that he was responsible to the corporation; and that he simply paid the money over to the corporation. It was shown that he and others working under him while in the employ of the corporation sold many cars in Alabama. In view of these facts, it was permissible for counsel to contend in argument that Fagan had confessed that he was doing the business individually to avoid paying corporation taxes.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.