Court Opinion

ID: 3249065
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:20:31.925852+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:59:20.233439
License: Public Domain

It seems from the former decisions of this court that, when a cause is dismissed or stricken from the docket without more, it is not such a final judgment as will support an appeal. Ex parte Attorney General, 142 Ala. 87, 38 So. 835, 110 Am. St. Rep. 20; Davis v. McColloch, 191 Ala. 520, 67 So. 701. It seems, however, that, where the dismissal is followed up by a judgment in favor of defendant against the plaintiff for the cost, it is such a judgment as will support an appeal, and mandamus is not the proper remedy to revise the action of the trial court. Ex parte Hendree, 49 Ala. 360. We think, however, that the record in the instant case shows that it was merely dismissed and was not followed up by a judgment for cost. Indeed, this is all that is shown by the record which purports to contain the orders of the trial court. It is true that the answer of the respondent, after showing a dismissal of the cause, contains the following recital: "It is further ordered and adjudged by the court that the plaintiff be taxed with all cost herein accrued *Page 243 
for which execution may issue." It is also true that the answer bears a certificate of the clerk, but which only goes to the correctness of the motion to dismiss or abate and does not refer to the order or orders of the count. On the other hand, the rebuttal record, as sent up, as disclosing the orders of the trial court, does not contain the quoted portion from the answer, and is accompanied by the clerk's certificate to the fact that it contains, not only a correct copy of the motion to dismiss or abate, but all orders thereon. We must therefore accept as true that the quoted portion of the answer as a part of the order was not made, and mandamus is the appropriate method to revise the action of the trial court in dismissing this cause as to the Pizitz corporation.
Section 5657 of the Code says:
"No suitor is entitled to prosecute two actions in the courts of this state at the same time, for the same cause and against the same party, and in such a case the defendant may require the plaintiff to elect which he will prosecute, if commenced simultaneously; and the pendency of the former is a good defense to the latter, if commenced at different times."
The plea in abatement in the instant case is under the latter part of this provision, and sets up the pendency of the former suit as a defense to the latter. Of course, the parties to the two suits must be the same and the cause of action, as set up in each suit must be the same. We think that the cause of action as set up in the two suits, while perhaps described in varying language, is identical — that is, the same wrong — though the last complaint charges the wrong as causing the death of the plaintiff in the first suit and said last suit is by her personal representative. As above noted, it is the identity or sameness of the cause of action and not the result of the same that must be the criterion. The last suit is under the homicide statute (section 5696 of the Code of 1923), and charges the death of the intestate to the thing for which she had sued before her death. This statute provides that the personal representative may recover for the death of the intestate, when caused by such act or conduct of the defendant, if the intestate could have recovered for such act or wrong if it had not caused death. The statute only applies when deceased could have maintained action had he survived, but the nature of the wrongful act or omission is the basis of the action. South North R. R. v. Sullivan, 59 Ala. 272. Any defense is available if it had been available against an action by the deceased had death not resulted. Suell v. Derricott, 161 Ala. 259,49 So. 895, 23 L.R.A. (N.S.) 996, 18 Ann. Cas. 636. The plaintiff, therefore, in the last suit stands in the shoes of the intestate, as the suit is by him in his representative capacity, and for all legal purposes the plaintiff in the two suits is the one and the same. In the case of Howell v. Howell,171 Ala. 502, 54 So. 601, this court held a bill filed by Howell executor was no bar to one subsequently filed by Howell as an individual; thus laying down the rule that the party complainant, in legal effect, was the testator and not Howell.
It is contended in brief of counsel that the statute is not available because the defendants are not identical in the two suits; that the first suit was against the Pizitz corporation alone, while the second suit is against the corporation and Isadore Pizitz also. "The effect of the pendency of the former suit as a matter of abatement was not avoided by raising new questions as to new parties in the second suit along with the old question between the parties to both suits." Ex parte Dunlap, 209 Ala. 456, 96 So. 443. The plea in abatement and motion to dismiss was by the corporation alone and not Isadore Pizitz, and the cause was therefore necessarily abated or dismissed as to the corporation alone, and as to this the trial court did not err, and the petition for mandamus is denied.
Mandamus denied.
SOMERVILLE, THOMAS, and BROWN, JJ., concur.