Frierson v. Blakesley
This text of 3 Stew. 267 (Frierson v. Blakesley) 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.
Opinion
Courts of law have long manifested great care in protecting the rights of equitable plaintiffs, who are compelled to sue in the names of others; and our statutes have made some salutary provisions, which this Court has inclined to favor, to prevent the dismissal of [269]*269appeals from before justices, on mere technicalities, and defects of form. We have also, perhaps, as liberal statutes of amendments, as can be found in other codes, and yet there are certain fundamental rules, which cannot be lost sight of, without endangering the rights of parties, and destroying all system in the administration of justice. The forms of actions to a considerable extent, are founded in good sense, and preserved from necessity; and hence we find that amendments have, by almost all Courts, been so restricted, as not to allow of a change of the character of the action. Again, the suit must be brought by him who has the legal right, and his name cannot be substituted by another. And although Courts for certain purposes, do recognise a benefieial or equitable plaintiff, so far as to protect his rights, I know of no instance where they have stricken out the legal plaintiff, .and placed the one for whose use the suit is brought in his stead. The case of Smith & Hill v. Cobb,
Judgment reversed.
1 Stewart 62
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