30 Fla. 210 | Fla. | 1892
Defendants in error, who were plaintiffs in the Circuit Court, recovered judgment against plaintiff in error for the sum of 85,500 on May 11th, 1891. A writ of error issued on January 27th, 1892, returnable to the present term of this court, and was duly served by lodging it in the clerk’s office of the Circuit Court on the 29th of the same month, and on the same day that clerk endorsed on the writ as his return thereto, an adoption of the transcript of the record then on file with our clerk, and the writ was returned to this court where it has been on file since the first day of February last. It appears that afterwards, on t::e 15th day of the last stated month, Mrs. Weller married one L. F. Frink, and on the first of March the attorneys of the plaintiff in error filed a pimcipe upon which they obtained from the clerk of this court a second scire facias ad audiendum errores, which, after describing the judgment correctly as one obtained by Tallulah H. Weller, and Frank Weller, an
The movants are the defendants in error, and the motion is to quash the writ of error and scire facias and the service of both writs.
We will dispose of the several points made in the brief of counsel for movants. Opposing counsel has filed no brief, nor any memoranda of the authority he read at the bar.
In so far as the motion relates to the writ of error, it is sufficient to say that this writ should not have been, and is not addressed to and does not command service on any of the parties named as defendants in error, nor is it addressed to, nor does it command service on any other party except that it is addressed to the Judge of the Fourth Judicial Circuit of the State
As to the scire facias acl audiendwn errores, it ■will be observed that it too describes the parties to the judgment correctly in the recital, which is the only place in which a description of them is attempted; and hence the features of the writ calling for consideration are the command to summon Mr. Frink, the husband, and the description of Mrs. Frink, as guardian of the minor.
We shall first notice the point of the introduction of Mr. Frink’s name into this writ; first premising, however, that it is to be kept in mind that the suit in error had been previously begun by lodging the wait of error in the clerk’s office of the lower court (State vs. Mitchell, 29 Fla., 302, 10 South. Rep., 746; Crippen vs. Livingston, 12 Fla., 638), and that this transferred the record to this court. The writ of error had then been brought; or, in other words, there was then
At the common law the marriage pendente lite oí a feme sole defendant in an ordinary action did not abate the suit, or preclude the plaintiff’s proceeding to judgment against her, the same as if she had not married. Chitty’s Pleading (16th Am. ed.), 465; E. Blackstone’s Comm., 414; Bacon’s Abr., Abatement, (G); Barbour on Parties, 144; King vs. Jones, 2 Strange, 811, s. c. 2 Ld. Raymond, 1525; Cooper vs. Hunter, 4 East, 520; Cro., Jac. 1, 323; Lofft, 27; Evans vs. Lipscomb, 28 Ga., 71; Crockett vs. Ross, 5 Greenleaf, 443 ; Commonwealth vs. Phillipsburg, 10 Mass., 78. It, seems, however, that if after judgment against her and before execution, she marry, there had to be a scire facias against her and her husband to obtain execution of the judgment (2 Wm. Saunders, 72. k. 1), though this was not so in all cases. Cooper vs. Hunter, supra; Cro., Jac. 1, 323 ; 2 Wm. Saunders, 72, 1; Doe vs. Butcher, 3 Maule & S., 557. The act of November 21, 1829, provided that when any female, plaintiff or defendant, should marry pending a-suit, her marriage should be suggested on the record, and her husband thereafter made a party, and then the case proceeded according to law, Th. Dig., sec. 4, p. 333, and this was the rule here till the practice act of February 8, 1861, whose forty-seventh section (sec. 996 R. S.) ordains that the marriage of a woman
A writ of error is a new action, and is brought as indicated above (State vs. Mitchell, supra); and it was not abated at the common law by even the death of thd defendant. If such death happened before the plaintiff in error had assigned errors, and he did not assign them, the executors or administrators of the defendant in error could take a scire facias (piare exec>/iionei/i noa to compel him to do so; but if the death happened after errors had been assigned, the executors or administrators proceeded in the name of the deceased defendant in error till judgment was affirmed, and then they revived by scire facias. 2 Tidd’s Prac., 1103; Townshend vs. Townshend, 10 Grill & J., 373. A plaintiff in error, after having assigned errors, could sue out a wilt of scire facias ad (mdiendnm errores to compel the executors or administrators of the deceased defendant in error to join in error. 2 Tidd's Pr., 1103 and 1172; Bac. Abr., Error, ( ); Bromley vs. Littleton, Yelv., 112; Wicket vs. Creamer, 1 Salk., 264; s. c., 1 Ld. Raymond, 439; Phares vs. Saunders, 18 W. Va., 336; Green vs. Wat
We are satisfied that the writ of error was not abated as to Mrs. Weller by her marriage. She could not abate a writ by her own act. King vs. Jones, 2 Strange, 811. The writ as stated, was regular in every respect; there was no variance as to parties, or otherwise, between it and the judgment or record. 2 Tidd, 1163; 2 Saunders, 101 a, note to Jacques vs. Cesar. The plaintiff in error was not required to serve the scire facias ad audiendmn errores until at least twenty-five days before the first day of this term. McClellan’s Digest, p. 843, sec. 2. Had she died, instead of marrying, it is true that the sci. fa. would have gone to her personal representatives, as they would have stood in her shoes, and necessarily to no one else, because none other could represent her; and this course would have been pursued without any abatement of the writ of error or consequent necessity for a revivor of the latter writ. N. O., J. & G. N. R. Co. v. Rollins, 36 Miss., .384; Phares vs. Saunders, 18 W. Va., 336. Here, however, she is still living to represent herself the same as she would in an ordinary action, and the scire f acias should run to her, j ust as if no
In our judgment the scire facias ad aadleruluvi errores should have conformed to the writ of error in the names of the parties, but in so far as Mrs. Weller, now Mrs. Frink, is concerned, it shows clearly upon its face that she is the person intended to be cited as defendant in error, both in her own right and as representing the minor. The variance of the sci. fa. from the writ of error is a matter susceptible of amendment. Gilmer vs. Bird, 15 Fla., 410 ; Loring vs. Wit-
The use of the word ‘ ‘guardian’ ’ is to our minds an immaterial error. Viewing the whole writ of sot. fa., we think, in view of the previous description of Mrs. Weller as next friend, that the word objected to can be given no other meaning than that of next friend. It can be reasonably construed as meaning such a guardian, but not any other kind. The variance is not fatal, but, on the contrary, is immaterial. Green vs. Foley, 3 Stewart, 239 ; Pearle vs. Phipps, 8 How., 256 ; Campan vs. Brown, 48 Mich., 145 ; Pacific Bank vs. Mister, 114 U. S., 463.
The plaintiff in error has moved to amend the proceedings, but not in the manner indicated above to be necessary, yet, under the liberal practice obtaining in these cases (Loring vs. Wittich, 16 Fla., 325-27), and the indisposition, to say the least, to quash even a writ of error for anything amendable (2 Tidd, 1162), we will give him the same benefit as if he had not mistaken the nature of the amendmént to be asked for, but upon the usual condition of paying the costs of both motions. Loring vs. Wittich, supra.
It seems that a sci. fa. ad aud. er. had issued cotemporaneously with the writ of error, but no service
The plaintiff in error will be permitted to amend, but he must pay the costs of both motions. It will be so ordered.