28 Wis. 103 | Wis. | 1871
Tbe action is upon a promissory note payable to Webster and Kimball or bearer. In tbe entitlingnof tbe summons and complaint, and also in tbe complaint, tbe plaintiff is described as tbe administrator of tbe estate of Jeremiab Whipple, deceased. Tbe complaint is otherwise in tbe usual form of complaints in actions upon promissory notes brought by tbe owners and holders thereof against tbe maters, except tbat it alleges tbat tbe note in suit “ was, before its maturity, and for a valuable consideration, duly transferred and delivered to tbe said Jeremiab Whipple, and tbe same came into tbe possession of said plaintiff as administrator of tbe estate of Jeremiab Whip ■ pie', deceased, and this plaintiff is now tbe lawful owner and bolder thereof ; tbat tbe same has not been paid, or any part thereof, but there is now justly due and owing to said plaintiff, as administrator as aforesaid, on tbe said note, tbe sum of two hundred dollars,” etc.
Tbe answer admits tbe making of tbe note as stated in tbe complaint, but denies each and every other allegation therein contained. It also sets up as another defense to tbe note, want of consideration, and notice to Whipple of such defense.
At tbe trial of tbe action tbe defendant did not appear. 'The plaintiff read tbe note described in tbe complaint in evidence, and rested bis case. Tbe circuit court found as fact
We find no error in this judgment. If the action is by the plaintiff in his individual capacity, and the judgment is in his favor as such, and not as administrator, as the plaintiff claims, the evidence is sufficient to support the judgment. For it seems to be well settled that an administrator, whether foreign or domestic, may sue in his own name upon a note payable to bearer, although such note was transferred to his intestate in the lifetime of the latter. Brooks vs. Floyd, 2 McCord, 364; Robinson vs. Crandall, 9 Wend., 425; Patchen vs. Wilson, 4 Hill, 57; Bright vs. Currie, 5 Sandf., 433—opinions by Bosworth and Duer, JJ., 437 and 438. In such case it was entirely unnecessary that the plaintiff should state in his complaint the source from whence he derived title to the note ; and having stated it, it was not incumbent upon him to prove it. The mere production of the note on the trial was sufficient, prima facie, to entitle him to judgment.
If, on the other hand, the action is by the plaintiff in his capacity as an administrator, then we are of the opinion that the general denial in the answer does not put in issue the allegation in the complaint that he was such administrator, and hence, that the plaintiff was not required to prove the fact. Some of the authorities hold that a denial of the representative character of the plaintiff is matter in abatement, and others that it is matter in bar of the action (5 Robinson’s Pr., 59, and cases cited); but the cases all seem to agree that such representative character is not put in issue by a plea of the general issue, but only by plea in abatement, or special plea in bar. Noonan vs. Bradley,
We are further of the opinion that if the action is by the plaintiff in his capacity of administrator, the judgment is rendered for him in the same capacity. The averments of his representative capacity are substantially the same in the complaint and in the judgment.
We have seen that the evidence is sufficient to support the judgment. The alleged insufficiency of the findings of fact by the court below are, therefore, of no importance. Since the enactment of chapter 264 of the General Laws of 1860, actions at law tried by the court without a jury, and suits in equity, are placed upon the same footing, when appealed to this court, in respect to the power and duty of the comt to review the evidence. Before that enactment it was held, that in actions at law such finding was as conclusive as the verdict of a jury (Kibbee v. Howard, 7 Wis., 150); and that if the court failed to find upon any material fact put in issue by the pleadings, due exceptions being taken thereto, the judgment would be reversed on appeal. Ogden v. Glidden, 9 Wis., 46. It is true that in the latter case the principle was held to apply to both classes of actions. That case, so far as it relates to suits in equity, was
By the Court.— Judgment affirmed.