Brown v. Tutwiler

STONE, J.

The present suit was commenced in 1866 in *373the name of Susan Hill as administratrix of C. W. Hill, deceased, and the cause of action declared on is a promissory-note payable to Susan Hill, given in consideration of personal property of the estate of C. W. Hill, deceased, purchased by one of the makers of the note “at a sale of the personal property of said estate made by plaintiff [Susan Hill], as administratrix” thereof. The case was tried, and a verdict and judgment rendered for defendants in the year 1871. An appeal was prosecuted to this court, and in January, 1875, the judgment of the Circuit Court was reversed and the cause remanded. — Hill v. Huckabee, 52 Ala. 155. At the spring term of the Circuit Court, 1875, the defendants filed one or more pleas to the merits in bar, and the cause was marked “ continued by operation of law ” At the fall term, 1875, no entry in the cause appears to have been made. In March, 1874, Mrs. Susan Hill was, by order of the Probate Court in which the administration was pending, removed from the trust of administratrix, ordered to make settlement, but no administrator de bonis non was appointed, until the 17th day of October, 1876, when P. A. Tutwiler was appointed administrator de bonis non. Up to this time the suit had stood on the docket in the name of Susan Hill, as administratrix of C. "W. Hill, plaintiff. At the spring term, 1876, the defendants filed a sworn plea, averring the removal of Mrs. Hill as administratrix, and the time of it, March 11th, 1874, in bar or abatement of her right further to maintain the suit; and at the fall term, 1876, a more elaborate plea, having the same object, was interposed by them, but not sworn to. We will not consider these pleas, nor the rulings on them, for we consider these immaterial questions.

On the 17th of October, 1876, two and a half years after Mrs. Hill was removed from the administration, and immediately after Mr. Tutwiler was appointed administrator de bonis non, it was moved that he, as such administrator, be substituted for Mrs. Hill as plaintiff. This motion was resisted by defendants; the motion granted, and defendants excepted. The foregoing are all the material facts that bear on the question presented.

In Harbin v. Levi, 6 Ala. 399, 403, Levi had been removed from the administration before the suit was brought. The cause of action, like that in the present record, was a note payable to the administrator for property sold by him as administrator. This court said: “We think it is clear that immediately on removal of Levi from the administration, his right over any of the assets of the estate ceased, and that *374it made no difference whether these assets existed in the shape of debts due to the intestate, or due by contract to the administrator.” And in Salter v. Cain, 7 Ala. 478, it was said that an administrator who had recovered judgment in his representative capacity, could not, after removal from the trust, rightly sue out execution in his own name to enforce its collection. To the same effect are Gayle v. Elliott, 10 Ala. 264, and Dunham v. Grant, 12 Ala. 105. The case of Tomkies v. Reynolds, 17 Ala. 109, rests on peculiar, exceptional facts, and does not conflict with the cases above cited. Hatch v. Cook, 9 Por. 177, is an authority for substituting a party in place of one deceased, resigned or removed, on motion.

In Pope v. Irby, 57 Ala. 105, we considered section 2908 of the Code of 1876, which reads as follows: “No action abates by the death or other disability of the plaintiff or defendant, if the cause of action survive or continue; but the same must, on motion, within eighteen months thereafter, be revived in the name of or against the legal representative of the deceased, his successor, or party in interest.” In that case the plaintiff, who was suing in his own right, died, and more than eighteen months elapsed before motion was made to revive in the name of the personal representative. Under the statute above, we ruled that the motion came too late. The statute provides alike for the cessation of the party’s capacity to sue or be sued, whether caused by death or other disability. In either event, the suit “ must, on motion within eighteen months thereafter, be revived in the name of, or against the legal representative of the deceased, his successor or party in interest.” In the case of Pope v. Irby, supra, we said, “ The statute authorizing the revivor of pending suits, and preventing their abatement because of the death or other intervening disability of plaintiff or defendant limits the right of revivor to eighteen months from the occurrence of the event which renders it necessary to revive.” And the statute, section 2908, makes the same provision for revivor for and against a “ successor or party in interest,” as it does in reference to the legal representative. Having ruled that the revivor in favor of, or against the legal repre- • sentative, can not be made, if moved for after eighteen months from the occurrence of the event which renders it necessary, we feel bound to make the same ruling as to a succeeding administrator, or other successor in the right to sue or be sued. We hold that section 2622 of the Code of 1876 must be construed in connection with section 2908, and that *375the former only renders more definite the word successor in the latter, without rendering its mandatory provisions less inoperative. — See, also, Waller v. Nelson, 48 Ala. 531. The case of Ex parte Jones, 54 Ala. 108, stands on facts different from those presented by this record. Whether the second head-note in that case is reconcilable with the views above expressed we do not propose now to consider. The revivor allowed in this case was improper, and the same is set aside.

The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the cause remanded.