85 Ala. 137 | Ala. | 1887
The defendant moved to dissolve the attachment, on the ground that the complaint was not filed within the time prescribed by the statute, which provides: “The plaintiff must, within the first three days of the return term of the attachment, file his complaint, and the cause stands for trial at such return term, if the levy is made, and notice thereof is given, twenty days before the commencement of such term.” — Code of 1886, § 2995. The writ of attachment was sued out November 9, 1885, returnable to the succeeding term of the Circuit Court, and the complaint was filed August 17, 1887. In construing the statute, we should consider +he construction which has been placed upon similar statutes relating to the same subject-matter, before its adoption. In Sally v. Gooden, 5 Ala. 78, speaking in reference to the statute of 1839 — “to abolish attorney’s fees in certain cases” — it is said: “The language of the second section, which declares the defendant’s right to make defense forfeited when he has omitted to plead to the merits within the first week of the appearance term, is express, and, if literally interpreted, is decisive of the case at bar. But the subject-matter of the statute, the pre-existing laws, and rules of court regulating the practice in this respect, all seem to us to require such a construction to be given to the act as will not divest the court of all discretion as to the time of pleading.” A rule of practice, which declared that “no plea in abatement shall be received, if objected to, unless, by the indorsement of the clerk, it appears to have been filed within
The defendant pleaded in abatement a variance between the affidavit for the attachment and the complaint, which variance is alleged in the plea as follows: “Said affidavit alleges that the defendant is indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars, for the rent of land due November 1, 1885, for which the attachment was sued out against the crop of defendant, and levied upon the same; and said complaint claims the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars, due by bond executed by defendant, payable to plaintiff on 1st day of November, 1885.” The plea does not aver that the bond is a different contract from that set forth in the complaint. The affidavit and complaint set forth a cause of action corresponding in amount, and in the time when payable. From the affidavit and complaint, alone, there does not appear to be such variance as would authorize the court to quash the attachment. — Morrison v. Taylor, 21 Ala. 778; Smith v. Wiley, 19 Ala. 216. It is not essential to allege in the complaint, in terms, that the cause of action set forth therein is identical with the cause of action mentioned in the affidavit, but a departure should not appear by a comparison of the affidavit and complaint.
The defendant set up in bar of the action, that about March 2, 1885, the land rented was sold under a power contained in a deed of trust executed by him to E. H. Caldwell, at which sale the plaintiff was the purchaser, and received a conveyance from the trustee; that after the sale the defendant, in order to preserve the statutory right of redemp
The defeixdant sets up the further defense, that prior to the mortgage under which the land was sold and purchased by plaintiff, he had executed to W. E. Hurt a mortgage on the same land, to secure a debt payable January 3, 1882; and that on November 23, 1885, the mortgage debt being unpaid, the executor of the mortgagee, who had died in the
The only objection urged to the charges given is, that they are misleading. By the settled practice of this court, the giving a misleading charge is not a reversible error.
Affirmed.