50 Ala. 56 | Ala. | 1873
The appellee moved for a summary judgment against the appellants, the sheriff and his sureties, for the failure of the said sheriff to pay over money collected on an execution, as allowed by R. C. §§ 8031, 3032. The defendants moved to dismiss the motion, because there had been two nonsuits. It appears that the plaintiff had once taken a nonsuit, and at another time had withdrawn a similar motion. In Bullock v. Perry (2 Stew. & Port. 319), a dismissal and a nonsuit were held not to be equivalent to two nonsuits. The withdrawal of a motion or suit is not the technical retraxit, or open and voluntary renunciation of his suit in court, by which the plaintiff forever lost his action. It is not a nonsuit, which is an omission or failure to prosecute the suit farther. The nonsuit is no bar to another action for the same cause,' except by the statute. The withdrawal is more akin to, if not identical with, dismissal. It has no professional signification, and, perhaps, as good a reason as can be given for distinguishing it from the nonsuit, which is really more negative, is, that the restraint upon the latter is an abridgment of the right of the citizen, and, therefore, should be strictly construed. We hold that a withdrawal and nonsuit are not equivalent to two non-suits.
The deposition of Young, and the certificate of the commissioner who examined him, are not set out in the transcript, and therefore we cannot decide the objections made to it.
The judgment is affirmed.