29 W. Va. 404 | W. Va. | 1887
This is an action of debt brought in March, 1819, in the County Court of Jackson county in the name of “ITenry C.
It is evident from the language of this order, that it was made, before the judgment was rendered.
To the judgment the defendants obtained a writ of error. 'The only error complained of is, that the court erred in rejecting the plea. If the commissioners had not in fact given the bond, it is clear, that they had no right to recover the judgment or to collect the money, until such bond should be given. (Hess v. Rader, 26 Gratt. 747; Blair v. Core, 20 W. Va. 265; Floyd v. Erwin, 29 Gratt. 598; Davis v. Snead, 33 Gratt. 705; Tyler v. Toms, 75 Va. 116; Dona
A plea in bar is one, which shows some ground for barring or defeating the action. Itis distinguished from all other dilatory pleas in this, that it impugns the right of action instead of merely tending to divert the proceedings to another jurisdiction, suspend them or abate the particular writ. It is in short a substantial and conclusive answer to the action (Stephens PI. 70). The-grounds for abatement are any matters of fact tending to impeach the correctness of the writ, to show, that it was improperly framed or sued out, without tending to deny the right of action itself. Any variance between the writ and the declaration shows, that the writ was not properly adapted to the action, and is therefore a ground for abating it. So, if the writ appears to have been sued out pending an action already brought for the same cause ; — if it name only one.person as defendant, when it should have named several; or if it appear to have been defaced in a material part, it is for any of these reason abatable. Such pleas relate to the person of the plaintiff, to the person of the defendant, to the count or the declaration or to the writ. A plea in abatement to the person of the plaintiff or of the defendant is such, as shows some personal disability in one of these parties to sue or to be sued. (Stephens PI. 65, 66).
We have pursued this subject far enough to see clearly, that the rejected plea in this case is not a plea in lar but in abatement. It does not pretend to deny the right of action, it only states, that at the commencement of the action the plaintiffs were not legally qualified to sue on the bond executed to them, which is the evidence of a valid subsisting debt. As soon as the plaiutiffs as commissioners should execute the required bond, they could sue on the bond executed to them. Being a plea in abatement it should have been filed at rules and could not properly be filed, after the
AfEIRMED.