5 Ala. 183 | Ala. | 1843
It is argued that the alias summons issued without the assent of the plaintiffs, and is the unauthorised act of the clerk, by which they ought not to be injured. We are not authorised so to consider it, for the process was applicable to the condition of the case, when issued, and it was not a necessary part of the clerk’s duty to issue it without instructions ; it must therefore be considered as the act of the plaintiffs, and being so, they could have no judgment against the defendants at its return term, except by confession. [Meek’s Sup. 13.]
The question here, however, is not as to the manner in which the plaintiffs might have conducted their suit, but as to the effect of thus dismissing it against one who appears to have been regularly in court.
It is a settled rule, that in general, a plaintiff cannot discharge any one defendant who is sued on a joint contract, without its op-
Wc wish to be understood as limiting our decision solely to the case presented, as the rule very possibly may not extend to a discontinuance, after a defence, personal in its nature, has been interposed by the one who is afterwards discharged from the action. [Ivey v. Gamble, 7 Porter, 545.]
Our conclusion is, that the dismissal of Horton from the suit¡ was a discontinuance of the action as to the other defendants.
Let the judgment be reversed.