Ex Parte Dunlap

96 So. 441, 209 Ala. 453, 1923 Ala. LEXIS 493
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 1, 1923
Docket6 Div. 779.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 96 So. 441 (Ex Parte Dunlap) 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
Ex Parte Dunlap, 96 So. 441, 209 Ala. 453, 1923 Ala. LEXIS 493 (Ala. 1923).

Opinion

SAYRE, J.

This is an application for the writ of mandamus to require the judge *455 of the Tenth circuit, sitting in equity, to vacate a decree awarding to petitioner’s wife alimony pendente lite and an attorney’s fee. The bill in this cause was filed for alimony without divorce (Hinds v. Hinds, 80'Ala. 225), and this application serves the purpose of an emergency appeal to review an interlocutory decree not otherwise reviewable. Ex parte Eubank, 206 Ala. 8, 89 South. 656; Brady v. Brady, 144 Ala. 414, 39 South. 237; State ex rel. Sellers v. Locke, 208 Ala. 169, 93 South. 876.

The main difficulty in the cause, as now presented, arises out of the fact that complainant, petitioner’s wife, prior to filing her bill in this cause, had pled a similar bill in Greene county. As to that, the facts are that complainant filed her bill in Greene county on December 14, 1920; demurrer to that bill was sustained June 6, 1921, complainant being allowed 30 days in which to amend, if so advised; January 27, 1922, the bill, no ameiidment having been offered, was dismissed without prejudice. In the meantime, November 10, 1921, this bill was filed in Jefferson county. Defendant’s (petitioner’s) answer in the present cause was filed December 8, 1921, in which were incorporated general and special demurrers. This answer, after a full and detailed averment of the facts in denial, stated the facts in reference to the bill in Greene county, and, to quote the answer, concluded:

“This respondent therefore states and avers that said suit in said circuit court of Greene county, Ala., has become dismissed or abated for want of prosecution, and that the matters and things involved in that suit are the same as involved in the present suit, and that the matters and issues involved in this present suit are, therefore, res adjudicata. This respondent says that if he. is mistaken in the foregoing averment that the said suit filed by complainant against him in the circuit court of Greene county has been dismissed or abated for want of prosecution, respondent says and avers in the alternative that complainant should be required to elect which of .said suits she will prosecute, and this respondent moves that this court require complainant to .elect.”

, Further proceedings will be stated later on.

That defendant’s plea was a plea in abatement there can be no doubt; that is, it did not deny complainant’s cause of action, but questioned only the propriety of the remedy sought, a distinction prevailing in equity as at law. 1 Dan. Oh. PI. (5th Ed.) marg. p. 626. And while it has been said by some of the earlier writers that no practical consequence results from such .distinction, still it is considered that—

“All declinatory and dilatory pleas in equity are properly pleas, if not in abatement, at least in the nature of pleas in abatement; and therefore, in general, the objections founded thereon must be taken ante litem contestatam, by plea, and are not available by way of answer or at the hearing.” Fletcher’s Eq. PI. & Pr. § 254.

In the text of 1 O. J. 258, § 575, where a cloud of cases, our own included, is cited, it is said:

“At common law, and under statutes which do not change the common-law rule in this respect, a ground of abatement existing at the commencement of the action, and not going to the-jurisdiction of the court over the subject-matter, must be. presented by plea or otherwise,-where it is not waived by appearance, before pleading in bar or otherwise to the merits, or it will not be available, pleading to the merits being deemed a waiver thereof.”

A general demurrer is considered as a plea to the merits. Ib. In the same text-(page. 260, § 576) it is written:

“In equity matter in abatement must be presented as a preliminary question and, as at law, will generally be waived by answering to the merits or by demurring to the bill, either generally or specially on other grounds.”

Such is the rule of this court in equity causes. Cartright v. West, 155 Ala. 619, 47 South. 93, citing authorities.

Petitioner refers to section 2451 of the Code as if finding there support for his theory that his plea of the pendency of the Greene county suit was, not merely a plea in abatement, but a “good defense,” meaning, as we read the brief, a plea in denial of complainant’s right of action, whether nominally a plea in bar or abatement. This section is a transcript of section 4331 of the Civil Code' of Georgia, whence numerous other sectións, for the most part declaratory of the common law, were imported into our Code of -1907. In Georgia a plea of the pendency of another suit is considered a plea in abatement which’ is waived unless pleaded in due time. Welchel v. Thompson, 39 Ga. 559, 99 Am. Dec. 470. If further argument were necessary) we might refer to the doctrine that, in the absence of indications to the contrary, the Georgia statute was imported with such ac-’ cretions by way of • judicial decision as it-had acquired in Georgia. Endlich, Intefp.' Stat. 371.

In equity a defendant may incorporate all matters of defense in his answer.' Code, § 3115. It may be conceded therefore’ that defendant might have properly incorporated his plea in abatement in his answer along with his demurrer and his avermentof facts in denial, and, in that event, no'waiver could be inferred (1 C. J. 269);- that; to constitute a waiver, there must be -some act on the part of defendant going to show; that he had submitted his right to the juris-' diction of the court. Tigrett v. Taylor, 180 Ala. 296, 60 South. 858. Nevertheless, upon; the record, it seems very clear that defend-ant, when filing his first answer to complainant's bill in Jefferson, had no purpose to. plead the pendency of the suit in Greene in" abatement. By reason of the facts there, averred, defendant sought to bring complaint to an election, thus indicating his willing *456 ness to join in the litigation of either bill if only he could be' relieved of the burden of the other. In the alternative, defendant proceeded upon the notion that, ipso facto, complainant’s case had been conclusively adjudicated against her by reason that she had failed to amend her Greene county, bill within the 30 days allowed for that purpose in the decree sustaining defendant’^ demurrer. But that decree Was not final without fur-' ther order- disposing of the cause. Rose v. Gibson, 71 Ala. 35. And finally, though after the commencement of the suit in Jeffersoni, the court dismissed the cause in Greene without prejudice. This did not constitute res judicata. Lang v. Waring, 25 Ala. 625, 60 Am. Dec. 533; Strang v. Moog, 72 Ala. 460.

Had defendant interposed his timely plea in abatement, it would, under the statute (section 2451, supra) and the decisions of this court, .have been fatal to the further maintenance of complainant’s bill in Jefferson county. Interstate Chem. Corp. v. Home Guano Co., 199 Ala. 583, 75 South. 166. For we think it must be conceded that as for the question whether defendant should be required to furnish means for the support and maintenance of complainant, the two suits were brought to enforce the same cause of action and the parties to the alleged equity of the two bills were the same. True, as to some collateral questions, viz.

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Bluebook (online)
96 So. 441, 209 Ala. 453, 1923 Ala. LEXIS 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-dunlap-ala-1923.