Court Opinion

ID: 6510528
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:21:56.74287+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:51.847965
License: Public Domain

BRICKELL, C. J.
This was an application to the Court of Probate, by an administrator with the will annexed, for an order to sell lands of the testatrix, for the payment of debts. The application was contested by the devisee of the lands ; and the material questions, shown by the bill of exceptions, are of fact — whether any debts existed against the testatrix, and the insufficiency of personal assets to satisfy them. The Court of Probate, on the evidence adduced, which was partly by deposition, and partly oral, adjudged the existence of debts, and the insufficiency of personal assets, and ordered a sale of the lands.
It is not intended by the statutes authorizing the Court of Probate to order the sale of lands, at the instance of the personal representative, that the order should be granted as a matter of course, whenever an application is presented, disclosing a case of which the court has jurisdiction. The personal representative is the actor, and the adversary^ of the heir to whom the land has descended, or of the devisee, if *265by will it has been devised. Either heir or devisee may contest the application ; and if contested, or in the absence of a contest, the onus of establishing the existence of debts chargeable on the land, and the insufficiency of the personal assets, rests upon him. Whatever defense the ancestor, or the testator, could have made if living, and suit had been commenced against him at the time when the application is made, the heir or devisee may make. — Bond v. Smith, 2 Ala. 660.
We may pass over the claim for fees due the judge of probate, in the course of the administration, and of this proceeding. These could not be charged on the lands, unless debts against the testatrix are shown, for the payment of which the lands are liable. The controversy is, then, narrowed to the existence and validity of the promissory note purporting to be made by the testatrix, payable to Daniel; and the controlling point of controversy is, whether this note is executed by the authority of the testatrix At common law, a plaintiff, suing upon a promissory note, was bound to prove its execution bv the defendant, or some one acting by his authority. The statute has changed this-rule, and when an action at law, or a suit in chancery, is founded on a promissory note, or other written instrument, the burden of proving its execution is not cast on the plaintiff, unless its execution is put in issue by a verified plea. The statute applies, however, only when the written instrument is the foundation of a suit, and is without application when it is proposed to use it collaterally to establish an indebtedness : then, its execution must be proved by the party relying on it.
Daniel proves very positively, in his first deposition, that the note was executed by authority of the testatrix; that at her request her name was subscribed to it, by her daughter, Ellen Garrett. In his second deposition, he is uncertain whether the name of the testatrix was signed by Ellen, or by William J. Garrett, though his best recollection is, that it was signed by Ellen. On the other hand,' Ellen Garrett testifies, that she did not sign the name of the testatrix to the note, and that she never saw it until about a week before her examination. Daniel testifies, the note was signed at the residence of the testatrix, in Hayneville, in his presence. Ellen Garrett, who lived with the testatrix, at the time the note is said to have been signed, testifies that Daniel was not at the residence of the testatrix, at or about the time the note is said to have been signed. William J. Garrett testifies, that the name of the testatrix was signed to the note by himself, at his own house, several miles from her residence, with the understanding that Daniel would take it to her, and, if she sasented to be bound by the signature, that her mark should *266be made and attested. The note was given in renewal and extension of a debt due from William J. to Daniel, on which the testatrix was not liable. The words of promise in it are, I promise to pay, and do not indicate that it was intended to be signed by more than one person, though it would doubtless bind all who signed on a sufficient consideration. The expression in the note, of a promise by one person only, is a circumstance having some tendency to corroborate another fact he states, that the note was given and accepted by Daniel as his debt only, without any purpose that it should be signed by any other person. Afterwards, Daniel was importunate for security, and he signed the name of the testatrix. If, as Daniel states, it was the intention at first that surety should be given on the note, the probability is that it would have been written we, not I, promise to pay. To say the least of it, it is doubtful and uncertain whether the name of the testatrix was signed to the note by her authority, or with her knowledge. When the burden of proving a fact rests upon a party, and the evidence leaves the fact in a state of doubt and uncertainty, it can not be regarded as established. — Brandon v. Cabaniss, 10 Ala. 155.
The decree of the Court of Probate is reversed, and a decree here rendered, dismissing the application, at the cost of the appellee.