Moore v. Tate

87 Tenn. 725
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 87 Tenn. 725 (Moore v. Tate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Tate, 87 Tenn. 725 (Tenn. 1889).

Opinion

Folkes, J.

This was an action brought in the Circuit Court of Shelby County to recover of Sam Tate and associates the balance due, after allowing sundry credits, upon the following acceptance:

“Montgomery, Ala., March 28, 1873.
“ Sixty days after date, pay to the order of M. G. Moore, Commissioner for the State of Alabama, or order, twenty thousand dollars, at the banking house of Josiah Morris & Co., Montgomery, Ala., for value received, in settlement of the penitentiary lease. (Signed) Smith & McMillan.
By ¥m. Smith, Ag’t.
“Accepted:
“ Campbell “Wallace, ’ W. B. Q-reenlaw, “J. W. Sloss, M. B. Prichard,
“Sam Tate, - M. J. Wicks.”

The parties thus accepting the draft composed the firm of “ Sam Tate and Associates.”

Defendants pleaded nil debit, payment, statute of limitations, and a special plea of set-off, wherein it was alleged that defendants were the owners and holders of certain coupons then due, issued by the State of Alabama to cover semi-annual interest on certain bonds of said State, which coupons, it was alleged, had been presented to said State of Alabama for payment and payment refused, and that the State declined to allow the said coupons as a [727]*727credit on said acceptance; that said coupons, with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent, (the legal rate in Alabama, where' said coupons are made payable), exceed the balance due the State of Alabama on the acceptance, after allowing the like rate of interest, wherefore they say that “ defendants hereby offer said coupons, and the interest due thereon, as a set-off against plaintiff’s demand, and ask that the same be allowed to the extent of the balance due plaintiff; • and, by reason of the averments set forth herein, the plaintiff is not entitled, in this action, to any other or further judgment against them except a judgment for the costs of this suit.”

The State joined issue on the pleas of nil debit, payment, and statute of limitations, but demurred to the set-off or cross-action, and for cause of demurrer set down the following:

“First. — That the State of Alabama is not subject to suit, either original or by cross-action.
“Second. — The claim sued on is one due the penitentiary of the State of Alabama, contracted with the State in a settlement of a business and commercial transaction, while the set-off is upon coupons from bonds of the State issued by it in its sovereign capacity, and on which the State is not subject to be sued, hut for which the holder can look alone to the honor of the State.”

There were other grounds of demurrer, which need not be stated.

The Court overruled the demurrer. Plaintiff' [728]*728interposed additional replications, to which, defendants demurred, which, being overruled in part and sustained in part, led to further pleadings, none of which need be mentioned, in the view we have taken of the case.

Such further proceedings were had that the cause came on, finally, to -be heard before the Circuit Judge, without the intervention of a jury, when it was made satisfactorily to appear, and it-was so adjudged, that there was due the plaintiff on said acceptance, after allowing all credits properly pertaining thereto, a balance of $5,702.97; and that there was due the defendants on matured coupons detached from bonds of the State of Alabama, as alleged in their several pleas of set-off, with interest thereon, the sum of $7,069.39. The final entry, after finding the respective amounts as just stated, continues as follows :

“ Thereupon plaintiff moved th e Court, notwithstanding the pleas of defendants, to render judgment in favor of the State of Alabama against them for said sum of $5,702.97; and the defendants, on the contrary, insisted that, as it appeared the State of Alabama owed them more than said amount on said matured coupons in their said pleas pleaded as a set-off or counter claim, the plaintiff was only entitled to a judgment for costs, and that said set-off or counter claim should be allowed to the extent of plaintiff*’s said demand. The Court is pleased to disallow the motion of plaintiff and to allow the defendants said set-off or [729]*729counter claim to tire extent of plaintiff’s demand.”

The Court thereupon ordered that the Clei'k cancel and surrender to plaintiff’s attorney so many of said coupons as would, with interest, amount to the |o,702.97, and to return the remaining coupons to defendants. Judgment was then rendered against defendants for costs only.

Erom such final judgment plaintiff has appealed in error.

The party for whose use the suit is brought is the real plaintiff'; so that the State of Alabama is, to all intents and purposes, the party plaintiff in the action brought to recover judgment on the acceptance set out in the declaration.

While a sovereign State may bring and maintain a suit as any other suitor, she cannot be sued in her own or a foreign Court, unless she has signified her consent thereto, either by statute or by some other unequivocal means.

These universally recognized principles are not challenged by the learned counsel for the defendants, but his contention is that the State of Alabama, having invoked the jurisdiction of the Courts of this State, for the purpose of recovering a judgment against a citizen of Tennessee, must submit itself to the same jurisdiction for the purpose of allowing such citizen to interpose any defense he may have, to the extent of preventing any recovery against him; “that when the State undertakes to litigate with the citizen the latter may, by way of [730]*730set-off or counter claim, make such, defense as will defeat the recovery^ though not entitled to a judgment over against the State, in the absence of some legislative enactment authorizing the recovery.”

This contention goes too far. It is true that when the State voluntarily places itself in the position of a suitor, whether in its own Courts or in those of a sister State, it will be held to have laid aside its sovereignty, and to have taken on the .garb of an ordinary suitor, so far as concerns all proper matters of adjudication growing out of the cause of action sued on, and the defendant would be entitled to plead and prove any and all matters properly defensive, including credits and set-offs, so far as the latter are dependent on, connected with, and grew out of the transaction which constitutes the subject-matter of the suit. See State v. Ward & Briggs, 9 Heis., 111; Tappan v. W. & A. R. R. Co., 3 Lea, 106.

Such defenses, though sometimes called set-offs, are not strictly set-offs. “ A counter claim is sometimes a mere set-off'; sometimes it is in the nature of a cross-action; sometimes it is in respect of a wholly independent transaction. I think the true mode of considering the claim and counter claim is, that they are wholly independent suits, which, for convenience of procedure, are combined in one action,” as was said in Winterfield v. Bradmeen, 3 Q. B. D., 326; Am. & Eng. Ency. of L., Vol. IV., p. 332, and cases cited.

[731]*731Set-off was unknown to the common law.

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Bluebook (online)
87 Tenn. 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-tate-tenn-1889.