May v. State Bank of North Carolina

40 Am. Dec. 726, 2 Va. 56
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 15, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 40 Am. Dec. 726 (May v. State Bank of North Carolina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
May v. State Bank of North Carolina, 40 Am. Dec. 726, 2 Va. 56 (Va. 1843).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

This is an attempt, by motion, to defeat a judgment, for matter of abatement which occurred prior to the judgment. The defendants in the action resist the process of execution, chiefly on the ground that the charter by which the plaintiffs were incorporated expired at a certain period ; and that, period, it appears by their own shewing, was antecedent [66]*66to the rendition of the judgment. The defence, it will be seen, is not upon the merits, but against the merits, and supposes that the merits ought not to have been considered. And the only enquiry that need be made *n reSarc^ t0 this objection is, whether it comes in due time and by a proper mode of proceeding.

Matter of abatement either shews the action to be abatable, or that it is de facto abated. The former usually exists at the time of the suit; the latter for the most part occurs during its progress. The first must be pleaded in technical form, and at a proper stage of the cause. The last may be, but need not be, pleaded ; and when apparent or made known to the court, will be declared by its order at any time, in any stage of the suit. A few examples will illustrate this distinction, and serve to throw light upon the question before us.

Misnomer of the plaintiff or defendant in the writ and declaration must be pleaded in abatement; and if not so taken advantage of, the cause proceeds to judgment and execution, according to the erroneous designation of the party. The execution must strictly pursue the judgment, and be warranted by it; and therefore if a defendant be sued by a wrong name, and omit to take advantage of the misnomer, he may be arrested on a ca. sa. by such wrong name. 1 Archb. Pract. 304. Crawford v. Satchwell, 2 Str. 1218. The plaintiff in' that case brought trespass and false imprisonment by the Christian name of Archibald; the defendant justified under a capias ad satisfaciendum upon a judgment against Arthur, and averred that the plaintiff in the then action was the same person who was sued in the former by the name of Arthur: and on demurrer the court held it a good plea, the defendant having missed his time for taking advantage of the misnomer, which should have been by pleading it in the first action. And the court said that in the case of a bond given in a wrong name, the obligor must be sued by that wrong name, and the execution must pursue it.

[67]*67So also if a feme covert sue as a feme sole, and her coverture be not pleaded in abatement, she recovers judgment (if successful upon the merits) as a feme sole, which judgment may be enforced by process of execution in exact conformity with it. This proposition is manifestly correct upon principle, and the case of Wortley v. Rayner, 2 Doug. 637. goes beyond it. In that case a verdict- was found for the defendant on a plea of coverture, and a writ of fieri facias sued out for the costs, commanding the sheriff to levy and pay them to the defendant and her husband. A rule was granted to shew cause why the writ and proceedings thereon should not be set aside for irregularity; it being a maxim that a person not a party to the record cannot be benefited or charged by the process, without a scire facias. Cause was shewn ; but the rule was made absolute, the court being clearly of opinion that the proceedings were irregular: and Ashhurst justice said, the wife might have had process in her own name, because the plaintiff having declared against her as sole, he was concluded from denying it.

And to come nearer the present case, if the plaintiff be dead at the time of action brought, this can only be alleged by plea in abatement, and a judgment, if recovered against the defendant, is in the name of the dead plaintiff; and process of execution may be sued out and acted upon in his name.

In these and other instances that might be given of matter for which the writ is merely abatable, the defendant is liable to an estoppel not only by force of the judgment, but also by reason of his failure to object the false designation, or the disability, or the nonexistence of the plaintiff at the time of action brought; which omission is considered a waiver of the objection on his part. It is this latter consideration which prevents the judgment from being erroneous; for the court is consequently not bound judicially to know the fact: and [68]*68hence it is that such judgment by a false name, or for a married woman or a dead person, cannot be reversed or impaired, by writ of error or any other proceeding whatever.

On the other hand an abatement de facto, for matter of abatement occurring after the commencement of the suit, rests on a somewhat different principle. I need only notice the case of death of the plaintiff or defendant after action brought. In such case the action, though well brought, cannot properly proceed when one of the parties has become extinct. The objection may come from either side, at any stage of the cause, and need not be pleaded in any shape or form. It is equally incumbent on both sides to give information of the fact to the court; and it is at their peril that those who conduct the demand or the defence take judgment for or against the dead party. To give effect, however, to the abatement, it must be declared by the act of the court; for though, in the language of the books, the cause is abated de facto, yet the abatement must be judicially pronounced. But whether so pronounced or not, it is equally error to render judgment for or against a dead man. If the death appears upori the face of the record, it is error in law ; if it does not so appear, it is error in fact: and in either case the judgment may be reversed by writ of error; in the former, by a writ of error in an appellate court; in the latter, by a writ of error coram nobis in the same court.

Such is the uniform rule of the common law in abatements de facto by the death of a party pending the action, at any time before final judgment. It applies to all cases, whether before or after a decision upon the merits, whether the cause of action does or does not survive to the representatives of the deceased party, and whether the death be that of a sole plaintiff or defendant, or of one of several joint plaintiffs or defendants. In these respects the rule has been modified [69]*69by statutory provisions, but not so as to affect the principle upon which the doctrine rests. By statute 17 Car. 2. ch. 8. § 1. (substantially adopted into our code) the death of either party between verdict and judgment shall not be alleged for error. Upon the construction of this statute, and by the express provision of ours, the judgment is entered for or against the party as though he were alive. 2 Tidd’s Pract. 848.1024. 1 Rev. Code, ch. 128. § 38. p. 498. Hence the necessity of reviving the judgment by scire facias before execution can be sued out upon it. Earl v. Brown, 1 Wils. 302. For as the judgment is general for or against the party as if he were living at the time it was entered, so the scire facias must follow the judgment, and recite it as if it had been entered in his lifetime. 2 Wms. Saund. 72 l. By the statute 8 and 9 Will. 3. ch. 11. § 6. if the plaintiff or defendant happen to die after interlocutory and before final judgment, the action shall not abate, if originally maintainable by or against the executors or administrators of the party dying, but may be revived by scire facias.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 Am. Dec. 726, 2 Va. 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-state-bank-of-north-carolina-va-1843.