35 Fla. 187 | Fla. | 1895
The defendant in error was the plaintiff in the court below, and sued the defendant (plaintiff in error) upon a declaration, the substantial allegations of which are, that “the plaintiff did, performed and bestowed work and labor, care and diligence in and about the business
The defendant, as executor, plead that his testator “never was indebted as alleged.” A trial was had before A. J. Corbett, Esq., as referee, and judgment rendered for the plaintiff in the sum of $540 and costs of suit, from which judgment the defendant prosecutes a writ of error.
Twelve assignments of error are- made upon the rulings and judgment of the referee. The first eight-assignments are submitted without argument. Under the established rule prevailing in this court they are-regarded as abandoned, and we do not take them into-consideration in rendering an opinion in this case.
The ninth assignment is, that the judgment of the-referee is against the evidence. The evidence in the case was conflicting; such conflict, however, was mostly upon minor points of the controversy. We think the evidence sufficient to sustain a judgment for the plaintiff. It is not necessary to summarize the testi
In the case before ns the plaintiff, besides the presumption raised by law from the general management of the household by the wife, offered evidence that the wife, owing to the physical infirmity of the husband, was accustomed to transact his business for him. This evidence as to the agency of the wife adds to the presumption of law a strict presumption of fact.
In what has been said here we have not been unmindful that the law regards with suspicion claims of
The last assignment of error relates to the form of the judgment entered in the case. It is alleged that the judgment is against the defendant individually, instead of in the representative capacity in which he is sued. The judgment, after reciting the trial, order of reference, etc., proceeds as follows: “It having been found that the said defendant, as executor of John Lott Phillips, deceased, is indebted to said plaintiff in manner and form as alleged by plaintiff in the sum of five hundred and forty dollars, and that said plaintiff is entitled to recover of said defendant her damages, together with the costs herein, and the charges in this behalf expended; therefore, it is considered, ordered and adjudged by said referee that jplaintiff do recover of said defendant the just and full
The judgment is wanting in the essential requisites-of a judgment against an executor, and the objection to-it is well taken. A similar judgment was considered by this court in the case of Cooper vs. Livingston, 19 Fla. 684, text 694-5, and the court said: “The judgment in this case is entered against the defendant, ‘that the plaintiff have and recover of and from the-defendant,’ the damages and costs. This is not a proper judgment against the defendant Cooper, as executor, nor is it to be satisfied of the goods, etc., of the-decedent. In actions against executors and administrators judgment should be given, if plaintiff recover, against the defendant as executor, etc., to be made out of the goods, etc., of the estate of the deceased, and not against the defendant generally.” Other authorities are then cited.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, and. the cause remanded for such further pi-oceedings as-may be authorized by law.