17 S.E.2d 441 | W. Va. | 1941
This appeal involves the right of the defendant, City Ice Fuel Company, to have reviewed, on a bill in the nature of a bill of revivor, as against the committee for the plaintiff, Fred Dankmer, an insane person, a suit in equity in the Circuit Court of Marshall County in which, originally, Fred Dankmer was plaintiff and the City Ice Fuel Company and others were defendants, and in which the Fuel Company filed its answer setting up a claim for affirmative relief against the plaintiff. Consideration of the questions presented require a brief statement of proceedings in the cause leading up to the order appealed from.
Fred Dankmer was an employee of the City Ice Fuel Company, and as such was, allegedly, short in his accounts. In the year 1929, the Fuel Company instituted its action in assumpsit against Dankmer, in the Circuit Court of Marshall County, to recover the amount of such alleged shortage. Early in 1930, this suit in equity was instituted in said court, in which an injunction was sought and obtained against the prosecution of said law action, on the ground that the matters in difference between the parties, by reason of intricate and complex accounts, could be adequately and fairly determined only in a court of equity, and the right to maintain such suit was upheld by this Court in Dankmer v. City Ice Fuel Company,
Sections 5 and 8, article 8, chapter 56 of the Code provide who may cause a suit or action to be revived in case of an abatement thereof by reason of death, insanity, or other circumstance mentioned therein, and within what time such revival may be effected. Reading the two sections together, we think it was intended that a plaintiff or appellant, and a defendant or appellee should be governed by the same rule both in respect to the right to revive, and the time within which steps to revive should be taken. It would be an anomalous situation if a plaintiff or appellant should be required to revive within two terms after suggestion of death, insanity or other circumstances creating need for revival, and a defendant or appellee permitted to revive at a later term. Apparently, the legislature intended that suits and actions should be revived within a reasonable time, and it established the two-term record as reasonable, and no good reason appears for any distinction between litigants.
Counsel for the Fuel Company may have had these considerations in mind, because he did not seek to revive the cause by statutory methods. He resorted to the ancient practice of revival by a bill in the nature of a bill of revivor. The right to use this method in a proper case is not disputed, nor can it be. Bock v. Bock,
The genesis of the two-term rule is interesting and assists us in reaching our conclusion in this case. It is outlined in the opinion of Judge Green in Gainer v. Gainer,
"It would seem clear that, if the death of a plaintiff in a chancery cause is suggested on the record, the representative of the plaintiff must in every case, when the revival of the cause is necessary, take steps to revive it by filing a bill of revivor, by asking a scire facias to revive it in his name, or by making a motion that the cause be proceeded with in his name, before the end of the second term after the death of the plaintiff has been so suggested on the record."
The language quoted is dicta, but it expresses most clearly what we think should now be declared law. The Gainer case was decided in 1887, and neither statute nor decided case throws any cloud upon the opinions therein expressed. It is true that the Gainer case refers to the death of a party to the suit, as most decided cases do, but our statute provides for the same rule as to insanity as that applied to death. It is doubtful if a bill of revivor was, at common law, ever used to revive a cause upon the insanity of a party, but we are assuming that under the liberal rules of modern practice, it would not be improper to so use that method under the same limitations of time as are applied to a motion or scire facias.
As stated above, the Fuel Company, on February 11, 1936, moved the court to revive the cause in the name of Mary Dankmer as committee, as plaintiff. This we held could not be done, and a decree following such attempted revival was held void.Dankmer v. City Ice Fuel Co.,
The decree of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.