6 Ala. 830 | Ala. | 1844
The statute of this State, [Clay’s Dig. 338r § 141,] allows a set-off where ver there are mutual debts subsisting between the plaintiff and defendant, and it follows, that if a judgment is a debt, it may be a set-off. That a judgment is a debt, is too clear for argument, but it is supposed, that as our statute requires the jury to certify the sum which the defendant may establish beyond the plaintiff’s demand, and for which the court is required to enter judgment in favor of the defendant, that this is
The defendant might, it is true, have omitted to plead the judgment as a set-off, and after judgment against him by the plaintiffs, on motion to the court, have set-off one judgment against the other. He was not, however, obliged to pursue this course, which would have subjected him to the costs of the suit, but had the privilege of avoiding the costs by pleading it as a set-off
Let the judgment be reversed, and the cause remanded.