Cunningham v. Lindsay

77 Ala. 510
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 77 Ala. 510 (Cunningham v. Lindsay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cunningham v. Lindsay, 77 Ala. 510 (Ala. 1884).

Opinion

CLOPTON, J.

Under the statutes prior to the act of 1843, the effect of the insolvency of an estate, judicially ascertained, [512]*512was to transfer to the Orphans’ Court the exclusive jurisdiction of all claims against the estate, and to abate all suits on such claims against the personal representatives, pending at the time of the declaration of insolvency. — Edwards v. Gibbs, 11 Ala. 292. By the twelfth section of the act of 1843, which has been condensed and incorporated in the subsequent Codes, and is contained substantially in sections 2579 to 2581, inclusive, of the Code of 1876, a pending suit does not abate, but the personal representative may plead specially that the estate has been declared insolvent; and in such case, the other issues must be tried, and a judgment rendered thereon. If such judgment is for the plaintiff, no execution must issue, if it is shown to the court that the estate has been declared insolvent; but an order must be made, that the judgment be certified to the proper Probate Court; and, on a certified copy being filed, the same must be allowed as a claim against the estate, unless it is shown to have been obtained by collusion.

It is insisted, that the effect of the present statutes is, to require the Circuit Court, when the suit is there pending, to retain jurisdiction, try the issues, and adjudicate the justness and validity of the claim; and that they debar the plaintiff from dismissing his suit, and transferring the claim to the jurisdiction of the Probate Court for adjudication; in other words, that they exclude the jurisdiction of the Probate Court, of claims the'subject-matter of pending suits in the Circuit Court. The vice of the proposition lies in a misconception of the purpose and scope of the act of 1843. With a view to secure speedy and inexpensive settlements of insolvent estates, exclusive jurisdiction of all claims was, by previous statutes, vested in the Probate Court. Under the operation of the statutes, suits that had been properly commenced in the Circuit Court, when the estate was supposed to be solvent, were abated, and the plaintiffs, after having incurred considerable costs and expense, were transmitted to another forum, and another suit, for the adjudication of their claims. The act of 1843 was designed to remedy this mischief; and the remedy proposed was, to restore to the Circuit Court its original right to retain jurisdiction, try the issues, and render judgment, notwithstanding the decree of insolvency. The effect is, not to take from the Probate Court all jurisdiction of claims, on which suits are pending, but the exclusive jurisdiction.

The statute requires, in terms: “ Every person, having any claim against the estate declared insolvent, must file the same in the office of the judge of probate, within nine months after such declaration, or after the same accrues.” As the result of judicial decision, construing the statutes in pari materia, an exception has been allowed in favor of claims, the subject of [513]*513pending suits. — Thames v. Herbert, 61 Ala. 340. The exception does not go to the extent of dispensing, under any and all circumstances, with the statutory requirement, nor does it postpone the time in which clams are required to be filed, except in the event the validity and the amount of the claim are judicially ascertained. A pending suit, without prosecution to judgment, does not bring the claim within the exception. Pipkin v. Hewlett, 17 Ala. 291. A dismissal of the suit withdraws the claim from the benefit of the exception, and a failure to file it within the statutory time will operate a perpetual bar. The declaration of insolvency does not affect the pending suit, further than a special plea may be interposed, and to prevent the issue of execution ; a different mode of obtaining payment of the judgment being provided. The suit progresses in all other respects, and with the same rights secured to the parties, as if the estate were solvent. The plaintiff has the. right to dismiss the suit, and the statute does not require the Circuit Court to retain it, against the plaintiff’s right of dismissal. Exclusive jurisdiction of all claims having been previously conferred on the Probate Court, and the exclusive jurisdiction, as to a certain class of claims, having been taken away by a subsequent statute, without prohibiting all jurisdiction, the operation of the statutes is, to confer on the IProbate Court exclusive jurisdiction of all claims on which suits are not pending, and concurrent jurisdiction of claims the subject of pending suits in other tribunals; and the rules are applicable which govern in cases of courts of concurrent jurisdiction.

In McDougald v. Rutherford, 30 Ala. 253, it was held, that where a claim was filed in the Probate Court against an insolvent estate, within the requisite time, and, on written objections being filed within the prescribed period, an issue was made up and tried, the parties appearing, a judgment disallowing the claim is conclusive on the plaintiff,' though a suit upon .the claim was pending in-the Circuit Court, at the time of the decree of insolvency. It is said : “ The Circuit Court having first obtained jurisdiction of the cause, the plaintiff, by interposing in a proper manner the pendency of suit in that court, might have defeated the proceedings to test his claim in the Probate Court. But the Probate Court unquestionably had jurisdiction of the subject-matter. The plaintiff had the right to file his claim in that court, and prosecute it to judgment; if he could.”

The general policy of the law is, that all claims, entitled or claiming to share in the distribution of the estate, shall, at the expiration of nine months after the declaration of insolvency, appear on the docket of the Probate Court, subject to the inspection of the administrator and creditors. There are statu[514]*514tory exceptions, in favor of infants and persons of unsound mind, and of claims which have not accrued. A construction of the statutes, which contravenes this general policy, is not warranted. The appellant had the indisputable right to file his claim in the Probate Court, though suit thereon was pending in the Circuit Court; and the effect of such filing was to give the Probate Court jurisdiction of the claim. Thereupon, the appellant had the right to obtain, in that court, the allowance of his claim, unless prevented by proper interposition. It may be, that the administrator, cr any creditor or distributee, the appellant having filed his claim in the Probate Court during the pendency of his suit in the Circuit Court, might have defeated the trial of the same in the Probate Court, unless and until the suit in the Circuit Court was dismissed, by filing in a proper manner written objections to further proceedings on account of .the pendency of suit in that court. If it be conceded that the proceedings in the Probate Court could have been stayed, the effect of such an interposition would not have been an abatement of the filing of the claim, as in case of a plea of the pendency of a former suit on the same cause of action. Such effect would be to indirectly defeat the claimant’s right to file his claim, which is independent of, and unaffected by a pending suit in the Circuit Court.

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Bluebook (online)
77 Ala. 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cunningham-v-lindsay-ala-1884.