McClellan v. Maxwell

• The opinion of the Court was delivered by

. Todd, J.

On the 24th. of February, 1876, Mrs. Eliza Thompson, wife of Josiali Stanbrough, executed, with the authority of her husband-, ■three several promissory notes for $800 each, in, favor of the defendant, Maxwell, and to secure their payment, at the same time gave him a .special mortgage on' her Joan Plantation,” in the Parish of Madison.

After the execution of this mortgage Mrs. Stanbrough died, leaving a last will, appointing her husband, Josiali Stanbrough, executor, and ■constituting him her universal legatee. ■

■■ A short time after her death, the husband, Josiali Stanbrough, also died. He likewise left a will devising all his estate to his nephew, Jesse Josiali Stanbrough, and naming the plaintiffs the executors thereof, who qualified as such, and caused the last will of the said deceased and also of Mrs. Stanbrough to be probated.

On the, lOtli of February, 1881, the defendant, Maxwell, obtained an order of seizure and sale on the notes and mortgage of Mrs. Stanbrough above described, under which the Joan Plantation,” the mortgaged property, was seized. Notices of this order of seizure and sale were ■directed to and served on the executors of the last will of Josiah Stanbrough, the plaintiffs herein, no executors having been appointed to the will of Mrs. Stanbrough.

*320An injunction was taken out against this order of seizure and sale by these, executors, which, upou trial, was dissolved, the judgment being rendered on the 18th of January, 1882. An appeal was applied for and obtained from this judgment by the executors, but was not prosecuted by them.

On the 24th of November, 1882, an appeal from said judgment was applied for and granted in behalf of Jesse Josiah Staubrough, the said universal legatee of Josiah Stanbrough, then and still a minor, through his father and natural tutor, and on this appeal the case is before us.

The appellant, who, it will appear from the foregoing statement, was no party to the proceedings in the lower court, has filed in this Court an assignment of errors, suggesting substantially that the order of seizure and sale issued on insufficient evidence, touching the authority of Mrs. Stanbrough to bind herself for the debt proceeded on, and also denying that her succession was represented in the notice and proceedings under it.

In view of such assignment and suggestions it becomes necessary to state that, even admitting that these matters could be made the grounds for an injunction, and could be taken advantage of otherwise than by an appeal from the order of seizure and sale, in the determination of this case we cannot go outside of the record, and nurst confine our attention solely to the pleadings and the issues between the parties to this injunction > suit, the executors of Josiah Stanbrough on the one side, and Maxwell, the alleged creditor of Mrs. Stanbrough, on the other.

We can only review, on this appeal of a third party to the proceedings, the issues presented by the record.

These alleged irregularities, to which our attention is invited, touching the insufficiency of the evidence on which the order in question issued, is not raised by the pleadings. On the contrary, the executors of Josiah Stanbrough, the plaintiffs in the injunction, in their petition for the injunction, justified their right to resist the execution of the order of seizure and sale issued on the mortgage consented by Mrs. Stanbrough; on the claim that Josiah Stanbrough, the husband; was the heir-at-law and the universal legatee of his wife.

Referring, then, to the pleadings in the case, we find that the plaintiffs, as executors aforesaid, resisted the order to sell the mortgaged property on grounds substantially as follows:

1. That there were privilege and mortgage debts against both of said successions; that the succession of Josiali Stanbrough might prove insolvent, and that the time allowed for the payment of these debts had not expired.

*3212. That the alleged mortgage debt had been extinguished by payments in cotton and money.

3. That the debt in question was really a debt of the husband, for which Mrs. Stanbrough could not legally bind herself.

4. That the debt which formed the consideration of the notes and mortgage was prescribed when they were executed.

The answer of Maxwell, the seizing creditor, was, in effect, the general issue.

Such are, in brief, the only matters for our consideration under the pleadings. And the character of these pleadings contracts the issues still more than would appear from the above formal statement; for the plea of payment, under a well known rule, is an acknowledgment of the existence of the debt, and narrows the issue to its alleged payment. It is, in fact, nowhere alleged in the petition that there was no debt to the amount of the notes, but only that it was the debt of the husband. On the trial, however, the main effort was made to show that when the notes were given, there was no prior debt, or that the debt that they, with the accompanying mortgage, were given to secure, was not in existence at the time of their execution.

We have examined the proof in the record, and whether wo consider the grounds of the injunction at length, as set out formally in the petition, or as shortened and narrowed by the character of the pleas urged, we are satisfied that none of these grounds are sustained by the evidence or the law applicable to them. Under different pleadings the result might have been different; but as the record presents the issues, and considering the evidence as it bears upon them, we find no reason for disturbing the judgment complained of.

It is proper, however, in this connection and in conclusion to say, that w'e do not decide whether or not the order of seizure and sale issued on insufficient evidence, and whether the plaintiffs, as executors of the succession of Josiah Stanbrough, could or did legally represent the succession of Mrs. Stanbrough, or whether Josiah Stanbrough had or not accepted the succession or the universal legacy, under the last will of his x>redeceased wife, and became invested with the absolute ownershix) of her estate, including the mortgaged property before his death, and whether his executors could or not accept said succession. These are questions discussed by the counsel, but under the pleadings we are not now called on to decide any of them.

Judgment affirmed with costs.