This is an action of assumpsit instituted in the Circuit Court for Escambia County, by the appellants as executors, &c., of John Henley, deceased, against the appellee, to recover the amount of an open account. The declaration is in the usual form, concluding with a profert of the
The following bill of exceptions appears in the record, viz : “Be it remembered that on the trial of this cause, the Court instructed the jury that it appearing upon the trial that the plaintiffs are foreign executors, they cannot maintain this suit as such executors, without producing the probate of the will duly obtained in the State where said will was admitted to probate, and properly authenticated, under the act of Congress of the 26th of May, 1790. To which opinion of the Court the plaintiffs by their counsel excepted, &c., and allege it as error here. Our statute, Thomp. Dig., p. 349, sec. 7, Duval Comp., 105, declares'that “ executors and administrators who shall produce probate of wills or letters of administration, duly obtained in any of the States or Territories of the United States, and properly authenticated under the act of Congress of the 26th of May, 1790, shall be authorized to maintain actions in the several Courts of this State, under the same rules and regulations as other plaintiffs.”
The question presented for our consideration, is whether the Court erred in giving the instruction set forth in the bill of exceptions, to the jury. We think it did. Whether the letters testamentary, under which the plaintiffs profess to act, had been duly obtained or not, was one to be
Every executor or administrator, wherever his letters pqav have been obtained, should make proferí of them,—s
And here it may not be amiss to remark that by the new rules, “in all actions by and against executors or administrators, or persons authorized by statute to sue or be sued as nominal parties, the character in which the plaintiff or defendant is stated on the record to sue or be sued, shall not in any case be considered as in issue, unless specially pleaded.” 1 Fla. R., general rules, No. 22.
Considering that the Court below erred in its charge to the jury, above set forth, and that such charge may have materially influenced their verdict, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded to that Court for further proceedings, not inconsistent with this opinion.
