Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Milbra

55 So. 890, 173 Ala. 658, 1911 Ala. LEXIS 291
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 27, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 55 So. 890 (Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Milbra) 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
Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Milbra, 55 So. 890, 173 Ala. 658, 1911 Ala. LEXIS 291 (Ala. 1911).

Opinion

MAYFIELD, J.

This action is by Levi Milbra, as personal representative, to recover damages for the wrongful death of his intestate, Edward Milbra.

The complaint joins counts under the employer’s liability act (Code 1907, § 3910) with counts under the homicide act (Code 1907, § 2486). The complaint was filed on the 15th day of June, 1909, and on the 23d day of June, eight days thereafter, the defendant filed the following plea in abatement of the action, which was sworn to: “Now comes the defendant in the above-en[661]*661titled cause, in its own proper person; and pleads in abatement to the suit filed in said cause that the plaintiff ought not to have and maintain this suit, for that, heretofore, to wit, on the 8th day of May, 1909, the administrator of this identical intestate, appointed by the probate court of Jefferson county, Alabama, instituted suit in the circuit court of Jefferson county, Alabama, which said court had jurisdiction of the parties and subject-matter of this suit, said suit being No. 8,108 in the circuit court of Jefferson county, against this identical defendant, upon the identical cause of action stated- in the suit filed in this cause, which said suit is still pending in the said circuit court of Jefferson county, undisposed of; for that, long prior to the institution of the above-styled cause, this identical defendant impleaded in the sáid suit No. 8,108 in said circuit court in the identical cause of action heretofore instituted in said circuit court on the 8th, day of May, 1909, as heretofore stated. Wherefore, the defendant prays judgment of this honorable court whether the plaintiff herein ought to further maintain this suit.” No further pleadings were interposed nor action by the court taken until February 14, 1910, when separate and special demurrers were interposed to this plea in abatement, and were on the same date overruled.

The defendant on the same date filed a, demurrer to the complaint, and pleas 1, 2, 3, and 5. Of these pleas, plea 1 was the general issue; plea 2 was contributory negligence; plea 3 was a plea of ne unques administrator; and plea 5 (as called on its face), a plea in abatement; but, in fact, law, and effect, it is a double plea— in bar and in abatement — in that it sets up facts which, if true, would be good in bar as a plea of ne unques administrator, and in abatement as a plea of another action pending. On the same day these pleas were filed, the court overruled demurrers to the third and fifth, [662]*662and sustained- demurrers to'-the second, and the trial was had on the first, third, and fifth-pleas, resulting iri' verdict and judgment -for' the plaintiff. From such judgment, this appeal is prosecuted. '

-. It therefore sufficiently appears that the court’ su's: tained a demurrer to the plea in abatement set out' above, which was-filed June 23,-1909, and it expressly appears that the court overruled a demurrer to plea 5, which is called-a plea in abatement, but is, in effect, á plea both in bar and abatement. In this the trial court was in error in both instances. The plea set' out' above —and to which the demurrer was sustained — was a good plea in abatement, while plea 5 was bad, in that it joined matter, both in bar and in abatement;• but the latter ruling is only material on this appeal on the question as to‘whether the sustaining of the demurrer to'the’other plea was error, without injury. We cannot say- that such was without injury. In order to sustain the fifth- plea, defendant would not only have to' prove his’plea'in abatement, but also to prove his plea in bar, that is, a plea' of ne' unques administrator; Proof which would have supported a verdict under the second would not have supported one under the fifth. ■- We do not- know upon what theory the trial court held this plea in ■ abatement insufficient. It seems to conform to all the requisites of such pleas. It is true that' at common law pleas in abatement were not favored. Defects in form, as to such, were treated as defects in substance as to pleas'in bar; and all defects in such pleas, except for duplicity, were then reached by a general demurrér.' The English statute of 4 Anne, c; 16, § 1,' requiring special demurrers as to various causes, had no application to pleas in abatement." But by our sthtute of 1807 (Clay’s Digest, p. 321) it became necessary to demur specially as to any defect of form in writs,-1 cómptaints, ¿leas, or- other■ pleadings. How[663]*663ever, -by the act of 1824 (Clay’s Digest, p. 334), special demurrers, for all purposes, were abolished for all purposes, the statute providing that “no demurrer shall have any other effect than that of a general demurrer;” but this last act was held not to extend to pleas-In abatement. — Casey v. Cleveland, 7 Port. 445; Humphrey v. Whitten, 17 Ala. 30. But thé Code of 1852 instituted a new system of pleading and practice in this state. Section 2236 of-that Code (section 5330, Code of 1907) provided that pleas must consist of a sufficient statement of the facts relied on in bar or abatement of the suit, and no objection can be taken thereto, if the facts are so stated that a material issue cani be taken thereto.

Since the Code of 1852, it has -been ruled by this court that pleas in bar and abatement stand upon the same footing. — Hall v. Brazelton, 46 Ala. 359; Lang v. Waters, 47 Ala. 624; Mohr v. Chafe, 75 Ala. 387. Many decisions of this court may be found cited in Mayfield’s Digest, vol. 4, p. 499, and in note to section 5330 -of the Code, under the different statutes which have governed in this state, and when .the statutes change the law, of course, the decisions must of necessity change. One of the main distinctions between pleas in abatement and pleas in bar is that the former must not only point out the plaintiff’s error, but must show how the error can and should be corrected; in other words, it must give the plaintiff a better writ. — 1 Chit. Pl. (16th Ed.) 362.

It was said by this court (speaking"by Brickell, C. •J.), in the case of Foster v. Napier, 73 Ala. 603: “The principle is well settled that the pendency of a prior suit for the same thing, or, as is generally said, for'the - same cause of action, in a court of competent jurisdiction, between the same parties, will abate a later suit; because the latter is deemed unnecessary and vexatious. * * * The reason of the principle is well expresséd [664]*664in the familiar maxim, ‘Nemo debet his vexari, si eon-stet curise quod sit, pro una et eadam causa.’ The doctrine is thus stated in 1 Bac. Ab. 28, M.: “The law abhors multiplicity of actions, and therefore, whenever it appears on record that the plaintiff has sued out two writs against the same defendant, for the same, thing, the second writ shall abate; for if it wére allowed that a man should be twice arrested, or twice attached by his goods for the same thing, by the same reason he might suffer in infinitum; and it is not necessary that both should be pending at the time of the defendant’s pleading in abatement; for if there was a writ in being at the time of the suing out of the second, it is plain that the second was vexatious and ill ab initio.’ It is the pendency of two suits for the same cause — their existence simul et semel — the law deems vexatious and discountenances.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hudson & Thompson v. First Farmers & Merchants National Bank
93 So. 2d 415 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1957)
Davis v. Jones
184 So. 896 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1938)
McCord v. State Ex Rel. Allen
126 So. 873 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1930)
Dent v. Foy
90 So. 317 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1921)
Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Ballard
80 So. 436 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1918)
Ashurst v. Arnold-Henegar-Doyle Co.
78 So. 386 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1918)
Interstate Chemical Corp. v. Home Guano Co.
75 So. 166 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1917)
Lewis v. International Insurance
73 So. 629 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1916)
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway v. Hubble
78 S.E. 919 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1913)
Milbra v. Sloss-S. S. & I. Co.
62 So. 176 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 So. 890, 173 Ala. 658, 1911 Ala. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sloss-sheffield-steel-iron-co-v-milbra-ala-1911.