Court Opinion

ID: 6511232
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:22:33.021442+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:53.091496
License: Public Domain

STONE, J.
The questions for our decision arise on special replications of plaintiff (Tutwiler) to pleas numbered 3 and 4 filed by defendant, Brown. Flea numbered 3 was and is the statute of limitations of. six years. , The special replication to this was, that suit had been brought on the same cause of action before the time limited [six years] had’expired; that judgment in that suit had been rendered in favor of the plaintiff; that on *187appeal'to this court' tliat' judgment had been reversed, and that the present suit was brought in less than one year from the-time of such reversal — Code of 1876, § 3235.
Plea numbered 4 was a denial that plaintiff,' Tutwiler, was administrator. The ground of denial was, not that Tutwilerhad not been appointed administrator, but that Mrs. Hill, widow of intestate, had been previously appointed, and had qualified as administratrix; that she had neither resigned, nor been removed, and, the administration being full, the appointment of Tutwiler was void. The special replication to this plea was,, that suit had been brought on' the note which is the form datioff of this suit, in the name of Susan Hill, administratrix of plain-; tiff’s intestate, against defendant’s intestate, and another who was co-maker of the note; and that on April 21st, 1876, while that suit was pending, ■ said defendants filed in said cause their plea in abatement, setting forth that, “since the institution of the suit in said cause, the said plaintiff, Susan Hill, had been removed from the office of administratrix - of the estate of Charles W. Hill, deceased, after due and legal proceedings had in the premises; ” that said note sued on was assets of said estate; that upon'the hearing of the issue raised on said plea, it was determined that said Susan Hill had been removed from said administration, -and thereupon the plaintiff, Tutwiler, was appointed administrator de bonis non of said estate; that letters of administration were issued to him accordingly; and that by virtue thereof he had brought this suit. There was a démurrer to each oí these' special replications, assigning various grounds..
The argument of appellee assumes, that the Circuit Court sustained the demurrer to each' of the special replications, stated above; and some of the positions contended for rest on that assumption. The judgment-entry of the court, showing the rulings on the'- demurrers, is in' the following language: “ And thereupon the demurrer of the defendant to the special replication of the plaintiff to the plea of ne unques administrator, and also the demurrer of the defendant to the special replication of the plaintiff to the plea - of the statute of ‘limitations, being argued by counsel, and considered by the court, it is adjudged by the court, that the demurrer to the special replication of the plaintiff first above mentioned be, and the same is hereby, sustained ;' and that the demurrer to the o.ther replication be, and the same is hereby, overruled. And thereupon the plaintiff takes issue upon the first and second pleas of the defendant, and' the defendant' joins issue upon the replication of the plaintiff1 to the plea of the statute of limitations.” , It is thus shown that, to the'plaintiff’s replication to the plea of the statute of limitations, the defendant’s demurrer was overruled, and issue was joined upon it.
*1881. We agree with the court below, in holding that the replication to the plea of the statute of limitations was sufficient. It avers every material ingredient of the statute, and brings this case directly within, its letter.—Code of 1876, § 3235. That statute, its prototype in England, and all similar statutes in this country, being remedial in their aims, have always been liberally, if not largely construed.—Givens & Co. Robbins, 11 Ala. 156. It is objected to the sufficiency of this replication, that the dismissal of the former suit in the court below is not shown to have been rendered necessary by the reversal in this court. Possibly, if the replication had contained fuller statements of fact, showing such was the effect of the reversal, it would have been more satisfactory. The statute, however, cantains no such provision. But it admits of question, if it is not our duty to presume a dismissal of the former suit was rendered necessary by the principles declared in the judgment of reversal. The expense attending a dismissal,* and the labor and delay of a second suit, would not likely be incurred without a reason. But, in the present state of this record, these questions are not presented, and we need not decide them.—Allen v. Roundtree, 1 Spears, 80 ; Chapman v. Mayrant, 2 Spears, 481.
2. The present case went off in the court below, on the sufficiency of the replication to the plea of ne ungues administrator. The purpose of that replication was, to show that defendant, by his plea in the former suit, alleging Mrs. Hill’s removal from the office of administratrix, and the defeat of her suit on that ground, had thereby estopped himself from denying that the administration was vacant, and, as a consequence, from denying that Tutwiler’s appointment, made afterwards, was regular. In Herman on Estoppel, § 165, it is said : “A party who obtains or defeats a judgment,' by pleading or representing a thing or judgment in one aspect, is estopped from giving it another in a suit founded upon the same subject-matter.”
In Phila., W. & B. Railroad Co. v. Howard, 13 How. U. S. 307, suit was brought on a written, contract, or agreement, as a simple contract. There was some erasure, or obliteration, in the face of the instrument sued on. The defendant pleaded, that the writing was a bond under steal, and that covenant was the proper action. The plea was sustained, and a recovery defeated. Thereupon, suit was brought on the obligation as a bond, and the defendant attempted to make defense, on the averred ground that it was a simple contract. The defense was disallowed. In the opinion of the court by Justice-Curtis, it is said : “ It does not carry the estoppel beyond what is strictly equitable, to hold that the representation which defeated one *189action on a point of form, should sustain another on a like point.”
In Ogden v. Rowley, 15 Ind. 56, the suit was upon an award. The defense sought to impeach the award for mistake, fraud, &e. It was replied, by way of estoppel, that defendant, in another action between the same parties, founded upon the same cause of action upon which the award sued on was founded, had pleaded in bar of that action the award now sued on, and had thereby defeated said action. It was held, that the defendant, having had the benefit of it as a valid award in that suit, can not be permitted to impeach it in this.
In Hooker v. Hubbard, 102 Mass. 239, a suit had been brought on a promissory note. The defendant pleaded, that he had given another note in renewal of it; and thereby defeated the action. He was then sued on the renewal-note, and attempted to defend on the ground that the second note was given on a condition which had not been fulfilled. It was ruled, that the plea and judgment in the former suit estopped him from making that defense.
The following cases assert the same principle: State National Bank v. N. W. U. Packet Co., 35 Iowa, 226; Crockett v. Lashbrock, 5 T. B. Monroe, 530; Milton v. Munford, 3 Hawks, 483; Martin v. Ives, 11 Serg. & R. 364; Polhill v. Walter, 3 B. & Ad. 114; Hall v. White, 3 C. & P. 136; Doe, ex dem. v. Lambly, 2 Esp. 635; Trustees v. Williams, 9 Wend. 147.
The following cases, rightly understood, do not conflict with these views. Some of them rest on the phraseology of their statutes, and the others have peculiar features which take them out of the operation of the rule: Packard v. Swallow, 29 Me. 458; Donnell v. Gatchell, 38 Me. 217; Sherman v. Barnes, 8 Conn. 138; Jenkins v. Bell, 2 Bich. Eq. 144; Crane v. French, 38 Miss. 503.
If it be contended that the principle above stated should not be applied to this case, because the effect will be to compel the payment of the debt to one not the administrator, and therefore not authorized to receive the money; the answer is twofold : first, it was his own act, by which the defendant placed himself in this condition; and second, if he defeats this action, he can not be compelled to pay the debt to any one, for he has already defeated the action by Mrs. Hill, who, according to his present contention, is alone authorized to sue and recover. But the estoppel can not act more oppressively in this case, than it may in another well-settled class of cases. If one execute a written promise or contract to another, styling him executor or administrator, this estops him from pleading ne ungues executor ; and a recovery may be had on such contract, in favor of *190one who neverwas such personal representative.—1 Brick. Dig. 984, § 988. Nelson v. Boynton, 54 Ala. 368, is not opposed to these views.
The Circuit Court erred in sustaining defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s replication to the plea of ne ungues, administrator, and also in the charge given. '
Beversed and .remanded.