96 Ala. 592 | Ala. | 1893
In November, 1881, G. M. Jones and A. A. Autrey, two of the appellees, purchased from D. J. Anderson four oxen and a timber cart, with the necessary fixtures, to be paid for in timber of a specified quantity and class, to be delivered at a certain place as soon as practicable, the contract being in writing, and by the terms of which a lien on the property sold was reserved in favor of the vendor. The vendees having failed to deliver the timber-pursuant to the contract, the vendor brought detinue for the property sold as above stated, and after several trials the suit resulted in a verdict for the vendees, or defendants, and judgment for costs in their favor against Anderson. At the commencement of the suit the plaintiff therein entered into a detinue bond, according to the statute, with appellants as sureties thereon, upon the filing of which bond an order or fiat for the seizure of the property was endorsed on the writ of detinue by the clerk. Aqrpellees replevied the property, and it was restored to them by the sheriff. The obligees in the detinue bond, Jones and Autrey, brought this action against Anderson, the principal obligor, and McCreary and Savage, his sureties, for a breach of the bond, the damages claimed being the costs and counsel fees incurred by Jones and Autrey in the detinue suit. The defendants pleaded the general issue and four special pleas. Two of the latter are confined to so much of the complaint as seeks to recover the costs of the detinue suit, and set up as a bar the judgment for costs in said suit in favor of Jones and Autrey, plaintiffs in this suit and defendants in the detinue suit. And the other two special pleas seek to set off the indebtedness from
In what we bave to say it will be assumed that D. J. Anderson was a party defendant to tbis suit, and in that we are borne out by the record. We will state the facts leading to tbe conclusion, inasmuch as appellees’ demurrer is based in part on tbe contrary assumption. Tbe summons and complaint is returned by tbe sheriff as executed on tbe defendants, McCreary and Savage, but tbe return is silent as to D. J. Anderson. There is no order of discontinuance as to Anderson, or other notice taken, so far as tbe record shows, of tbe want of service on bim. His name is mentioned in tbe body of tbe summons as one of tbe defendants sued, and also in the caption to the complaint. In each of tbe pleas filed bis name is tbe first mentioned in tbe caption, and tbe introductory part of each plea is, “Come tbe defendants,” &c. Tbe appeal bond is signed by said Anderson and tbe other defendants, and recites that tbe appeal is taken by all tbe defendants, including Anderson by name, and tbe clerk’s certificate is to tbe same effect. Under these circumstances, there can be no doubt that Anderson appeared as a party defendant, notwithstanding tbe failure of the record to show service on bim, and such appearance must be held a waiver of tbe want of service.
Tbe two special pleas which set up tbe judgment against appellant Anderson for tbe costs and counsel fees incurred in tbe detinue suit, as a bar to so much of plaintiff’s demand as consists of said costs and counsel fees, are filed jointy by Anderson and tbe other defendants, who were not parties to tbe detinue suit, and consequently in no way liable under that judgment; — it is a personal judgment against Anderson alone. Whether that judgment would bar a recovery against Anderson in tbis action, bad be availed himself of tbe defense by a separate plea in bar of so much of appellee’s demand as is covered By such costs and expenses, we need not inquire. Anderson’s co-appellants, who joined with bim in tbe pleas, became liable for such costs and expenses on tbe breach of tbe bond wbicb occurred on Anderson’s failure to prosecute tbe detinue suit to effect according to tbe condition of tbe bond. — Foster v. Napier, 74 Ala. 393. Tbe fact that a judgment was rendered against Anderson in that suit for tbe costs and counsel fees incurred therein by appellees (and
The pleas are filed jointly by three defendants, and the defense therein set up, if good at all, is only so as a personal defense to oaie of them alone. In such cases the ruling of this court is that the plea is bad as to all the defendants. Doe ex dem Evans v. Richardson, 76 Ala. 329; Overdeer v. Wiley, 30 Ala. 709. As stated in Ohitty on Pleading, the principle is as follows: “A plea which is bad in part is bad ■in. foto; if, therefore, two defendants join in a plea, which is sufficient for one, but not for the other, the plea is bad as to both.” — 1 Ohitty on Pleading (18 Amer. Ed.), p. 594.
What has been said applies equally to the third and fourth pleas, which undertake to set-off appellee’s alleged liability to Anderson for the purchase-price of the property, under the contract of sale, against the demand sued for in this action. Clearly, Anderson’s co-defendants in this action have no interest in, or ownership of, that contract. It is not a demand on which they could maintain an action of debt or indebitatus assumpsit in their own names against the parties suing in this action. “Less than this is not mutuality. Ownership at the time of suit brought is of the very essence of the right” to plead the claim as a set-off. — Jones v. Blair, 57 Ala. 457. Nor is it a ease coming within the terms of section 2681 of the Code. It is not an action in which sureties are sued alone, nor is the claim sought to be set-off against plaintiffs’ cause of action, a debt or liquidated demand within the meaning of said section. The third and fourth pleas, therefore, are clearly insufficient as a defense for two of the defendants, and consequently bad as to all. The demurrers, though somewhat argumentative and informal, readied these defects, and there was no error in the action of the court in sustaining them.
The demurrer on the ground that the claim pleaded as a set-off is barred by the statute of limitations was not well taken, for the reason that it does not appear from the facts stated in the plea when the cause of action accrued on the contract of sale. By its terms, as the pleas show, delivery of the timber was to be made within a reasonable time from
Tbe special pleas being insufficient in law, and the demurrers thereto being properly sustained, there was no error in tbe ruling of tbe court in excluding from tbe testimony tbe contract between Anderson and appellees, nor in tbe action of tbe court in giving tbe general affirmative charge in favor of tbe plaintiffs.
Tbe judgment of tbe Circuit Court is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.