37 Ala. 216 | Ala. | 1861
AThe grant,of .administration to
As to the first point made in the petition for a rehearing, we have only to say, that the court must judicially take notice of such abbreviations as “ adm’r,” or acknowledge itself incompetent to understand the commonest writings.
After a careful consideration of the -second point made, and the authorities adduced in support of it, we «cannot find in it a reason for 'ohapging the conclusion which we have heretofore announced. The authorities cited by the counsel show, as we think, most clearly, that if the administration would, under the circumstances stated, -be deemed prima facie an administration upon the estate of the senior Moseley, it may nevertheless be shown -to have been in fact an administration on the estate of the junior Moseley-.
Two specific objections were made to the plaintiff’s testimony in the court below, one of which implied an admission that the administration was upon the estate of the junior Moseley ; and the bill of exceptions states, that the court sustained the objections, and excluded the evidence. The objection -to the evidence stated in the second point of .the petition for .a rehearing, was not one of the objections' made in the court below, but is now brought forward for the first time. If that objection had not been excluded from the attention of the plaintiff’s counsel, and of the -court, by the other specific objections which were made, it .might have been obviated. The court erred in sustaining the specific objections which were made ; and we cannot affirm that it was error without injury, because there was another objection which might have been made, and which, if made, might have been obviated. It is our duty, therefore, to reverse, notwithstanding there may have been another objection, which might have been fatal to the admissibility of the evidence, but which was of such a nature that, if it had been made in the court below, it was capable of being obviated.
The petition for a rehearing is overruled.