Court Opinion

ID: 8635244
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-24 19:44:07.583385+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:55:54.397501
License: Public Domain

BLATCHFORD, District Judge.
The action is one founded on contract, being brought to recover the amount of certain materials alleged to have been furnished for the building of the vessel. The cause of action, if there was any, therefore survived the libellant. Under such circumstances, the right of the executors to have the suit continued in their names is one conferred by statute. Act Sept. 24, 1789, § 31 (1 Stat. 90). No period of time is prescribed by the statute within which they must come in voluntarily and apply to be substituted. Therefore no laches can be predicated on the mere lapse of time. .If the claimants desired the suit to proceed, they could, under the same statute, have at any time compelled the executors to come in within twenty days and be substituted. The provision of the statute is as follows: ‘‘Where any suit shall be depending in any court of the United States, and either of the parties shall die before final Judgment, the executor or administrator of such deceased party who was plaintiff, petitioner, or defendant, in case the cause of action doth by law survive, shall have full power to prosecute or defend any such suit or action until final judgment, and the defendant or defendants are hereby obliged to answer thereto accordingly; and the court before whom such cause may be depending is hereby empowered and directed to hear and determine the same, and to render judgment for or against the executor or administrator, as the case may require. And if such executor or administrator, having been duly served with a scire facias from the office of the clerk of the court where such suit is depending, twenty days beforehand, shall neglect or refuse to become a party to the suit, the court may render judgment against the estate of the deceased party, in the same manner as if the executor or administrator had voluntarily made himself a party to the suit." So, also, the claimants had it in their power to secure the issuing of the commission, without any cross interrogatories, if the libellant was remiss in furnishing them. Therefore, so far as laches is concerned, the claimants ax-e, in any point of view, as open to the charge as is the libellant The motion to substitute the executors must, therefore, be allowed.
The motion to vacate the stay is_ denied. The executors have permitted so long a time to elapse before taking steps to revive the suit, because both parties seem to have understood that the cause would not be further pi-osecuted. And yet neither has done anything to turn himself, or the other party, or the cause, out of court. It appears that the witness, who was to be examined under the commission, is a material witness for the claimants, and now resides in the East Indies, and that the commission cannot be executed and returned in less than a year. Under the circumstances, I think that the claimants are entitled to a continuance of the stay.