The only effect of the demurrer in this case is to raise the question whether, on the facts stated in the answer, the defendant has shown sufficient cause why judgment should not be rendered against him. Inasmuch as it appears that the defendant answered fully in the original suit, that the inquiry was then gone into as to the precise amount for which he was to be charged, that both parties were then heard on the question, that the matter was distinctly adjudicated by the court, and that the defendant has paid over on execution the full sum for which he was then charged as trustee, there would seem to be no room for doubt that he has shown sufficient reason for his discharge.
The plaintiff, however, contends that the previous adjudication in the original suit was only interlocutory in its nature ; that it determined nothing conclusively between the parties, except that the defendant was chargeable as trustee; and although he does not allege or offer to prove any new fact, or to vary the evidence in any particular from that which appeared at the former hearing, he claims the right to re-open on scire facias the question of the amount for which the defendant ought now to be held
The plaintiff insists that he has a right to maintain this action against the defendant under Gen. Sts. c. 142, § 39, which provide that if a person adjudged a trustee in the original action does not pay over on demand sufficient to satisfy the execution, the plaintiff may sue out a writ of scire facias against the trustee, to show cause why judgment and execution should not be awarded against him .and his own goods and estate, for the sum which remains due on the execution. The answer to this is, that the defendant does show sufficient cause against the maintenance of the suit by setting out that he was charged in the original suit with a specific sum as trustee, and ha3 paid it over on execution. This is a bar to the further prosecution of the suit. The plaintiff has had an effective process, under which he has received all that he was entitled to according to the judgment of the court.
We do not intend to be understood as saying that the court cannot, in the exercise of a sound discretion and for sufficient cause, re-open or set aside on scire facias a judgment rendered in the original suit, by whiéh the amount for which the trustee was chargeable‘was fixed and determined. As the original suit and the scire facias are part of the same course of proceedings,
Demurrer overruled.
