Court Opinion

ID: 3253478
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:23:44.465047+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:41:00.222154
License: Public Domain

This is a companion case to Industrial Finance Corporation v. J. B. Turner, Claimant, ante, p. 460, 110 So. 904, the only difference being that this is the original detinue suit between the plaintiff and the original parties defendant, while that was the same suit prosecuted by the plaintiff against Turner, as an independent claimant, intervening under section 7403 of the Code.
The evidence and proceedings in the two cases, as shown by the bills of exceptions, were identical, and the decisive question in each case was presented by the plaintiff's offer in evidence of the acceptances and trust receipts given by Holcomb Motor Company to the plaintiff, the Industrial Finance Corporation, and the exclusion of those documents by the trial court, on the defendants' objection, on the ground that they did not tend to show legal title in the plaintiff. In the instant case plaintiff elected to take a nonsuit with bill of exceptions, on account of the adverse ruling stated.
In the Turner Case, supra, we held, upon thorough consideration, that the documents in question were admissible to show legal title in the plaintiff, and that their exclusion was prejudicial error. The same conclusion must follow here.
It is true, as urged by counsel for appellees, that plaintiff's right of possession depended upon the making of a demand for the possession of each car before it had been sold by Holcomb Motor Company, and that the burden of proof as to the timeliness of such demand was upon the plaintiff. But defendants' plea of the general issue conclusively admitted their possession of the cars at the time suit was begun (Code, § 7404), and such possession imports, prima facie, their continued ownership (Scaife v. Stovall, 67 Ala. 237, 241; Donahoo, etc., v. Durick, 193 Ala. 456, 465, 69 So. 545; 22 Corp. Jur. 126, § 65). Hence, with the acceptances and trust receipts in evidence, plaintiff would have made out a prima facie case, and the burden of proof would have rested on defendants to show a sale and change of ownership.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance herewith.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and THOMAS and BOULDIN, JJ., concur. *Page 474