Court Opinion

ID: 6512846
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:23:56.460778+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:56.076706
License: Public Domain

STONE, C. J.
— The only amendment of the bill, of which the record gives notice, was the addition of the name of Hiram S', Austin as co-complainant with Adolpha M. Austin, his wife, who was made sole complainant in the original bill. Whatever may have been the extent of the amendment, it appears to have been made in the face of the original bill, by interlineation with ink of a different color. In such case, a foot-note has no office to perform, and its omission furnishes no ground of demurrer.
The present bill was filed in 1884, about six months after the meritorious complainant became of age. Three years before that time, in 1881, Werborn came to an informal settlement in the Probate Court, in which he charged himself with assets which had-come to his hands, and claimed and obtained credit for disbursements he had made. This was a recognition that the trust was then continuing, and intercepts the presumption of payment, which the law, in the absence óf recognition, raises at the expiration of twenty years. — Austin v. Jordan, 35 Ala. 642; McArthur v. Carrie, 32 Ala. 75; Blackwell v. Blackwell, 33 Ala. 57; Harrison v. Heflin, 54 Ala. 552; Garrett v. Garrett, 69 Ala. 429; Whetstone v. Whetstone, 75 Ala. 495.
The defendant, Werborn, interposed a plea of res judicata in the court below, of which the record furnishes no evidence of formal disposition. The plea is fatally bad, and should have been so pronounced on demurrer, or on motion to reject it as frivolous. One of the points it seeks to make is, that a settlement of the administration was had in the Probate Court, a balance ascertained and decreed to Mrs. Pinney, which Werborn has paid ; and that more than ten years had elapsed after such decree when this bill wasffiled. A complete answer to this is, that the complainant in this *500suit — Adolpha—was no party to that .proceeding, and, consequently, could not be concluded by it. Both the bill and the plea show, that she sought to propound her rights, and have them passed on in that settlement; but, at the instance of Werborn, she was denied the right to appear in that settlement, or to have her interests considered. It was res alios acta, and can not affect Mrs. Austin’s rights in this suit. — T. & C. R. R. Co. v. East Ala. Railway Co., 75 Ala. 516; Cain v. Sheets, 77 Ala. 492; Walker v. Elledge, 65 Ala. 51; 1 Greenl. Ev. § 522; 1 Brick, Dig. 823, § 273.
A second point the plea attempts to make is] that the claim is stale, and barred by the lapse of twenty years. As we have said, uncontroverted averments of the bill, the admissions contained in the plea, and, we may add, the record testimony adduced, each and all show that Werborn recognized the liability as an open, unsettled trust, as late as 1881.
There is nothing in the plea, and any disposition the court may have made of it, could not injure the appellant. Werborn v. Austin, 77 Ala. 381.
Affirmed.