Franks v. Wanzer

25 Miss. 121
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 Miss. 121 (Franks v. Wanzer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franks v. Wanzer, 25 Miss. 121 (Mich. 1852).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an appeal from a final decree of the court of probates of Monroe county, rendered at the May term thereof in 1851.

It appears from the record, that the appellant, John Franks, who was administrator of the estate of Burrell Huggins, deceased, as such, in 1846, filed a partial inventory of the-debts-, and claims which belonged to the said estate. This inventory contained two notes made by the appellant, each for the sum of $3,500. These notes were classed with the claims which were designated as good debts. The inventory contained the following explanatory remarks, to wit: “ The notes 6f Franks are credited by $1,063 on January 1, 1838, and is entitled to [124]*124further credits, as will appear by account against estate in favor of Franks allowed by court.”

After various interlocutory proceedings, at the March term of said court, in 1850, the appellant filed his final account for allowance; and at his instance, citations were issued to the parties interested in the estate, returnable to the succeeding June term. In this account the appellant debited himself with the said two notes and interest thereon, from the dates at which they respectively fell due. Appended to this account is the following explanatory statement: “ These notes were given for a half section of land and three negroes, claimed by Huggins under a purchase from Isaac Kirkland. An action of ejectment has been brought against Franks, and a recovery had in the • circuit court of Monroe for this land. A bill in chancery is now .pending to set up Huggins’s equitable title.”

Exceptions were filed to this account by Wanzer, one of the defendants in error. The exceptions were allowed, the account was corrected and restated, and a final decree entered against the appellant, by which he was charged with the amount of .the two notes and interest.

At the term at which the case was heard and determined, a ■motion was made by appellant for a continuance until the result of a certain suit, which was then pending in the vice-chancery court at Fulton, should be known. This motion was overruled, and the appellant compelled to go to trial. This action of the court is assigned for error. It is also insisted, that the court erred in charging the appellant with the amount •and interest of these notes.

These objections will be considered as presenting but one ■•question, as the motion to continue was based on the same .ground, upon which it is contended that the appellant should not have been charged with the notes.

An application for the continuance of a cause, is submitted to the sound discretion of the court in which it may be pending. This is doubtless the general rule; and the principle is equally general, that the exercise of this discretion is not the subject of revision by an appellate court. This rule rests upon a very solid principle of expediency; but as all rules of prae-[125]*125tice in courts are adopted for the promotion of justice, a case might arise which would justify a departure therefrom. If flagrant and manifest injustice were done by an ill-directed and capricious exercise of such discretion, we are not prepared to say, that it would not be our duty to apply the corrective. But such a question does not arise in the case before us, as we apprehend the motion made in the court below by the appellant should not be regarded as an application for a continuance based upon the ordinary grounds; but rather as a motion to postpone the present consideration of the case, simply for the • reason, that in view of all the facts then before the court, and on which alone the decision would be based, it was improper to proceed to a final adjudication of the cause.

At a preceding term of the court, the appellant had, as we have seen, reported the said notes as claims against himself, in obedience to the directions of the statute. This act was doubtless an admission of the validity of the notes or of the justness of the claims. Now if it should be holden, that by such admission he was not estopped from afterwards showing that said claims were unjust at the time, or had subsequently become invalid by reason of the failure of the consideration of the notes, he was in no worse condition than any other debtor of his intestate.

In his final account he debited himself with the amount of said notes; alleging, however, that they were given for a tract of land, in part purchased by him from his intestate, and that a recovery had been had of the land, in an action of ejectment by a party claiming under a paramount title.

From this statement, contained in the account which was sworn to, and the evidence offered in support of the motion, it was highly probable that the consideration of the notes, to a\ great extent, had failed. It is probable that the appellant, \ when he filed his account, was under the impression that the recovery which was had of the land had exonerated him from his accountability for the amount of the notes. No such result, however, followed. The equitable title of his intestate may have been good, and of which he might have availed himself to protect his vendee; and if good, the consideration of [126]*126the notes will not have failed. In view of the relation in which appellant stands in regard to the estate of his intestate, we apprehend that nothing short of a showing, that the latter had no title whatever, should discharge him.

Upon this state of facts, therefore, in proceeding to render a final decree in the cause, the court was compelled to charge the appellant with the amount of the notes and interest, in the face of a strong probability that the consideration of the notes had failed, or for that reason to discharge him from his liability, when, by a postponement of the case, it might turn out that he was justly bound.

The question here arises, whether, under these circumstances, it was not error in tire court to proceed to a final decree 1 ( It is clear to us, upon the facts which were before the court, (that the appellant should not have been held discharged from I his obligation to account for the notes. And unless it can be | shown, that he would not have been exonerated by a failure in i the consideration, we must answer this question in the afirmative.

In reference to the point, whether the appellant could avail himself of a failure of consideration, two positions are assumed.

First, it is insisted, that as the appellant took a conveyance of the land, which was the consideration of the notes, and was let into possession under covenants of warranty, he could not, before actual eviction, set up a failure of the consideration arising from a defect in the title of his vendor.

This position is based upon a principle in regard to actions at law brought upon notes given for the purchase-money of land, which is well recognized in this court. It perhaps might be shown, that this doctrine is not applicable to the case at bar. But the question before us is not, whether the consideration can be impeached before eviction, but whether a failure of consideration could be set up at all by the appellant.

In the second place, it is insisted, that the report or “giving in” of the notes was an admission upon the records of the court of the justice of the claims, it was an acknowledgment of so much money in his hands, and was equivalent to a con[127]*127fession of judgment for that amount.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Miss. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franks-v-wanzer-miss-1852.