135 Ala. 497 | Ala. | 1902
The bill in this case was filed by appellee to invalidate the last will and testament of William Breeding, deceased. A plea was interposed by appellants averring that the will bad' been regularly admitted to probate in the probate court of Morgan county, after a contest of said probate by James Breeding, a brother -of the testator and an uncle of appellee. The plea further avers, “that during the hearing or trial of said contest, complainant was examined as a wi In ess ¡n the behalf of said contestant, that complainanl aided and abetted said James Breeding in the inauguration and prosecution of said contest, and while not marked as a contestant on the record was a contestant in fact, for that he paid a part or portion of the funds or fees for the employment of attorneys to institute and prosecute said contest, he paying the attorneys the amount ascertained and determined to he his pro rata part; and he zealously aided in said contest; that the solk-’Tors now representing the complainant are the same that were employed to and did contest said will before the probate court,” Appellee demurred to the sufficiency of the plea, and thereupon appellants moved to strike out the demurrers from the file, upon the ground that the plea should be set down for hearing upon its sufficiency and not demurred to. The motion to strike the demurrers was overruled. The cause was then submitted upon the demurrers, (he demurrers sustained and the plea held insufficient. The appeal is prosecuted from both decrees.
¡Section 427 of the Code authorizing “Appeals from certain interlocutory decrees” does not provide for an appeal from the decree overruling the motion to strike the demurrers. We are, therefore, confined to the consideration of the. propriety of the decree sustaining the demurrers and holding the plea insufficient,
The proper practice to test the sufficiency of a plea in' a court of equity is to set it down for hearing upon its sufficiency or by motion to strike, and not by demurrer. “The. effect, hoAvever, is the same and furnishes no ground for a reversal.”—Freeman v. Pullen, 119 Ala. 235.
The case of Knox v. Paull, 95 Ala. 510, does not decide the question here raised by the plea. It was expressly stated in that case that the contention here considered was conceded merely for the purpose of argument.
The decree of the chancellor holding the plea insufficient must be affirmed.