The complaint charges, respectively, trespass de bonis asportatis and trover. The counts, as last amended, were good, and the amendment of the pleas cast no additional burden of proof upon defendant. The defenses was that the goods described in the complaint, and none other, were taken under and by virtue of a writ' of possession issuing in consequence of a judgment for appellants, rendered by a justice of the peace, in an action between these parties. The court gave the general affirmative charge requested by plaintiff (appellee). The plaintiff’s case, prima facie, was made out. As appears from the evidence of value of the goods taken, no exemplary damages were awarded in the city court. The evidence was plenary that Allen acted for and as the agent of appellants in taking the goods. Unless the defense indicated *160was sustained, by the production of admissible evidence, the affirmative charge was dne plaintiff.
The judgment relied on was said to have been rendered by Weaver, a justice of the peace. He had died before the trial. In order to identify the docket as that of Weaver an agreement, between former counsel for appellee and counsel for appellant, reciting that Judge Lacy, Weaver’s successor, would testify to a state of facts showing his succession to the possession of Weaver’s docket, etc., was entered into. The book was then offered and was denied admission in evidence. The agreement, as readily appears, was with the view to excusing further attendance of the witness Lacy, on that previous trial, whereat the pleadings were dealt with, and-evidence was not taken, though the witness was in attendance. It does not purport to be an agreement to obviate Lacy’s attendance throughout the litigation. Its only office was to release Lacy on that occasion, and it was not, obviously, an agreed statement of facts, as was the case in Prestwood v. Watson, 111 Ala. 604, 20 South. 600, cited for appellants. The docket was properly excluded, not being identified as that of Weaver. The evidence of the witness Perdue, as to his reception of the book from Lacy, was proper as far as it went; but clearly the secondary statement of what Lacy said about the docket’s being Weaver’s did not identify the docket as that of Weaver.
Sundry evidence, offered by defendants, of papers left Avith Weaver at the time of the trial of the detinue suit, was Avell disalloAved. There was no evidence tending to sIioav search among Weaver’s papers or effects for the papers alleged to have been lost. Indeed, the testimony was that the widow of Weaver only deferred that search. She was not brought as a Avitness, nor Avas there any other or further effort by defendants shown *161looking to the discovery, among Weaver’s effects, of the papers sought to he secondarily proven.
The question propounded to A. C. Smith on cross-examination was not erroneously disallowed. No information was given the court as to the purpose of the question. No mention of “consignment papers” had been before made in the examination or testimony of the witnesses. No suggestion was made that such papers were lost, nor that a predicate for the introduction of secondary evidence of their contents was desired to be laid. The question, on its face, did not indicate the relevency, materiality, or pertinency of the matter inquired about. The court cannot be put in error for disallowing such a question. — Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Moog, 78 Ala. 284, 56 Am. Rep. 31; Ross v. State, 139 Ala. 144, 36 South. 718.
With the alleged docket of Weaver not in evidence and secondary evidence of the consignment papers inadmissible, the defense necessarily failed, in material particulars, of support in the evidence. So failing, the prima facie case made by the plaintiff was unrebutted.
There is no prejudicial error in the record. The judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Dowdell, C. J., and Simpson and Mayfield, JJ., concur.