54 So. 601 | Ala. | 1911
Appellant, as a tenant in common, filed his bill against the respondents, as his cotenants, to sell the lands described in the bill, for division, on the ground that the same could not be equitably divided or apportioned among the joint owners; and, incidentally, to allot dower and homestead rights as to one of the tenants in common, and for an accounting against others for rents, incomes, and profits. The bill is evidently filed under section 5222 et seq. of the Code of 1907. The respondents demurred to the original bill. This demurrer being sustained, complainant thereafter twice amended his bill, and the respondents’ demurrer to the bill as last amended was overruled. Thereafter, on April, 10, 1908, the respondents, or some of them, filed a special plea in abatement of the suit,, alleging that this action was commenced in the chancery court
The identity of complainants, of respondents, and of subject-matter, is not sufficient to make one suit a bar to the other; the suits are by no means the same. Defenses available to the one would not be at all available in the other. For example, a plea of nul tiel executor would defeat the one but not the other. That there was no necessity of further administration would and actually did defeat the former in part, but it would be no defense whatever to the other. The fact that the lands could be equitably divided among the tenants in common would defeat the last, a sale for division; indeed, if the averments of facts as to which there seems to be no dispute are true, it is the only complete defense to the bill; yet such fact would be no defense to the first suit.
It is true beyond question that all the relief sought in both bills ought not to be, cannot be, granted, and if granted in one it would be a bar to the other; but that alone is not sufficient to make the pendency of the one abate the other. To be sufficient to abate the action en
Conceding, without deciding, the identity of parties and of subject-matter, in the two suits, sufficient for one to abate or bar the other, there is not such identity of the causes of action or bases of the two suits. In fact, the real equities of the two suits are entirely different. Instead of being the same, they are repugnant to and contradictory of each other.
The first is that the lands are chargeable with existing debts of the testator, and the purpose of the first bill as last amended was to subject the lands to the payment of this indebtedness, and it sought only incidentally, and as a necessary result of such proceeding, to distribute the residue, if any remained, among the devisees of the testator. The last bill denied every material averment of that part of the first bill, denied that there were any debts which were a charge upon this land, denied that there was any necessity of an administration of the lands in order to pay debts, or legacies, alleged that the lands were free and immune from any charge or trust imposed by the will or by law, in effect denied the right of the executor to further deal with them as a part of the administration of the trust imposed upon him by the will, and sought to sell the same freed from all such trust or charge, for division among the joint owners thereof. This much is made certain and conclusive by the decree of the chancellor in the court below, on demurrer to the first bill as last amended. A demurrer was sustained by the chancellor to the bill in so far 8R it sought to sell the lands to pay debts
While the demurrer to the first bill was overruled, and the bill held sufficient in so. far as it sought to charge a part of the respondent, as executors de son tort, and to have an accounting by them as such wrongdoers or intermeddlers, this feature of the bill of course, would be no bar nor ground to abate a subsequent suit, by tenants in common, to sell the common property for division and to have an accounting as for incomes, profits, or waste, although the parties and the subject matter might be the same; the rights and liabilities of the parties in the two cases being entirely different. But,
Speaking to this subject, McClellan, C. J., said, in the case of Watson v. Jones, 121 Ala. 579, 25 South, 720: “The decree did sustain the fourteenth ground assigned in one of the demurrers. And it is a decree sustaining a demurrer to the bill, and nothing more or less. His reference to the assignment upon which he rested the decree is the mere giving of his reason for the decree, and his reference to the other assignments is to be taken as a niere expression of his opinion that the bill is not bad for the reasons stated in them. What he did and all he did 'was to sustain respondent’s demurrer to the bill, and the effect of this was to put the bill out of court unless it is amended. The respondent can take no steps in the cause until the amendment is made. She may then, as she is advised, again demur to the bill, and appeal to this court if her demurrer is overruled. If the amendment is not made, she goes out of court with her costs. She cannot come here now' to have this court declare whether the chancellor’s reasons for the decree he rendered and his view's as to the bill being otherwise unobjectionable are sound. She cannot thus have us to review' a decree in her favor, or to render any judgment here in respect of a mythical decree, a decree never rendered in legal contemplation, against her.”
In the case of Cottingham v. Greely, supra, this court, speaking through Tyson, J., said: “There was no amendment by the complainants of their hill to meet the defect pointed out by the demurrer which the chancellor sustained, and until the bill is amended the complainants have no cause in court, and should they fail to make the amendment within the time required by the order of the court the appellants go out of court with their costs.”
It has been last ruled by this court that, to abate a suit because of another action pending, the action must be pending when the plea is filed, as well as when the second suit is brought. While the plea alleged the pendency of the first suit, it was not supported by the proof, but disproved in this respect.
The burden of proof was on respondents as to this plea, and, they having failed in the proof as to material averments thereof, complainant was entitled to a decree on that issue. It therefore follows that the decree must be reversed; and a decree will be here rendered for the complainant, as to the plea in abatement.
Keversed and rendered and remanded.