41 Ala. 198 | Ala. | 1867
A claim against the estate of the decedent, for ninety thousand dollars, in favor of Bender & Waller, had been presented to the administrators, and included in their list of claims against the estate. The contesting creditors moved the court to reject this claim, on the ground of its invalidity as a charge against the estate; which motion was granted by the court. Subsequently, and after the issue as to the solvency or insolvency of the estate had been argued and submitted, but before any decision had been rendered, Bender & Waller, who were not contestants, moved the court for a re-hearing as to their claim; which motion the court granted, and, after receiving evidence in relation to it, reinstated it on the list. It is contended, that this action on the part of the court was erroneous.
It was certainly within the power of the court, at any time before a final decree had been rendered, and while the cause was under consideration, to retract an opinion, correct an error, or permit additional or explanatory evidence to be adduced, in relation to any matter legitimately connected with the issue before it. Such a power exists in all courts, and its judicious exercise is often indispensable to the attainment of justice ; but, whether it should be exercised in any case, or not, is a matter of discretion with the court, under the particular circumstances of the case, and its exercise is not revisable on appeal.—Donnell v. Jones, 17 Ala. 689; Winter v. Phelan, 27 Ala. 649 ; Florey v. Florey, 24 Ala. 241.
The fact that the re-hearing granted by the court was at the instance of persons not strictly parties to the contest, if an irregularity, is not a reversible error.
The issue in the proceeding was, the insolvency of the estate vel non; and the inquiry as to whether or not the administrators were entitled to the payments which they had made, in discharge of debts against the estate, was without the issue. In a proceeding like the present, it is not a proper office of the court, to make filial adjudication upon the correctness or validity of claims or payments that may be incidentally involved ; nor should the same strictness and fullness of proof as to their validity be required, as when they are up for final adjudication on their merits, in an appropriate proceeding for that purpose. As to the particular payments under consideration, we remark further, that the ruling of the court in relation to them was beneficial to the contestants, in this: If the payments were made in Confederate currency, a large amount of indebtedness against the estate was extinguished by the use of that which has since become worthless ; consequently, the capacity of the estate for the payment of its remaining debts has been increased. If the court, then, erred in its ruling upon this question, it was error without injury.
The record does not purport to set out all the evidence on which the court acted in allowing the claims of Bender & Waller, of the estate of Davis, and of N. G. Band; nor as to the matter of the exception relating to the allowance of claims against the estate, alleged to have been paid. Consequently, as to all these matters, we must presume in favor of the correctness of the rulings of the court below.
Some evidence is set out in the record, relative to the amount of corn, cotton, and fodder, on the plantation in the fall of 1864; but no action of the court was asked or had upon this evidence, so far as the record discloses, and there is no effective purpose for which we can consider it.
Decree affirmed.