Walker v. Wigginton's Administrator

50 Ala. 579
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 50 Ala. 579 (Walker v. Wigginton's Administrator) 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
Walker v. Wigginton's Administrator, 50 Ala. 579 (Ala. 1874).

Opinion

PETERS, O. J.

This is a bill to enforce the allowance of a set-off against a judgment at law. The appellant, Walker, is the complainant in the court below; and the administrator of Henry B. Wigginton, deceased, is the principal defendant. The other defendant, Harrison, is merely a nominal party; no decree can be rendered against him, and none in his favor. The cause was submitted on the bill, answer, amended answer, exhibits, agreement of counsel, and depositions taken on both sides. There was no demurrer, or motion to dismiss for want of equity; but pleas for defendant Wigginton were incorporated in his answers, setting up a want of sufficient diligence to sue the maker of the note indorsed by Wigginton to Walker, in time so as to bind Wigginton on his indorsement, and the statute of non-claim.

The case made by the bill and answer is substantially this : On the 22d day of December, 1865, the complainant, Walker, executed to Henry B. Wigginton, then living, two promissory notes of that date; the one for $257.00, due one day after date, and the other for $1,250.00, due twelve months after date; both payable to said Wigginton. After this, in 1866, Wigginton died, intestate ; and Relfe, who has been succeeded by Newman, the appellee,, was duly appointed administrator of his estate. This appointment was made on June 22, 1866. After Relfe’s appointment, he sued Walker, some time in 1867, on the notes above said, in the circuit court of Lowndes county in this State, and prosecuted this suit to judgment in said circuit court, at the November term thereof, 1867. To this suit Walker made no defence. On this judgment, thus obtained, execution was issued against Walker, and levied on his land to satisfy the same. Walker then filed this bill, praying an injunction to stay said execution, and for an account to be taken to ascertain what sum of money was due to him from Wigginton at his death, on a certain indorsement of a promissory note, made by one Tarver, and payable to Wigginton, bearing date January 1, 1861, for $6,400, and falling due on the 1st day of January, 1862; which note Wigginton during his life, on [582]*582the 15th day of September, 1862, assigned by indorsement to Walker; and that on said accounting be be allowed to retain in bis hands, by way of set-off to said judgment, such amount as said Wigginton owed him on said indorsement; alleging, also, that he had used due diligence to collect said note last said from said Tarver, and had failed ; and that said Wigginton was still bound on said indorsement for whatever sum was due and unpaid thereon. It is alleged, also, that Tarver had died, and his estate had been declared insolvent. Tarver died before the suit on the note was commenced against him. But it is shown that his representative was sued, after his death, by Walker, on the note, some time in 1867. But, before this suit proceeded to judgment, one Smith filed his bill in chancery, against Tarver’s representative, in favor of himself and other creditors of Tarver, praying that the administration of Tarver’s estate be removed into the court of chancery, for final settlement and distribution among his creditors. Walker was made a party to this suit, as a creditor of Tarver, and his suit against Tarver’s representative was enjoined, and the administration of Tarver’s estate was removed into the court of chancery, and is still pending in that court; and upon reference to the register, to ascertain the amounts due each creditor of Tarver, it was found that Walker’s debt amounts to $2,689.31. This report of the register was made at the March term, 1868, and confirmed by the chancellor. But it was not then ascertained, nor since disclosed, so far as is shown by the record in this cause, what amount of this balance on the Tarver note would be paid on distribution of Tarver’s estate on the settlement of the insolvency. It also appears that Wigginton’s estate was regularly declared insolvent on January 2, 1868. It further appears that, at the time the suit above said, brought by Wigginton’s administrator against Walker, in 1867, as above said, was pending, it was not known, and could not be known, what sum, if anything, was due and owing on the liability created on said indorsement above referred to; and it is insisted that this claim was not then in a condition to be pleaded as a set-off.

1. It is contended by the appellee, that the failure to sue Tarver, or his executor, on the note assigned to Walker by Wigginton, to the first court after the assignment, discharged Wigginton from his liability on the indorsement. It is replied to this, that the indorsement waived this right on the part of Wigginton. The assignment is in writing, on the back of the note, and is in these words: “ For value received, I indorse the within note to B. W. Walker, and waive suit to be brought to the next term of the circuit court, when suit should be brought, September 15, 1862.” This contract of indorsement [583]*583is the foundation of Walker’s claim against the estate of Wigginton, and by it he seeks to obtain a set-off against the judgment in favor of Wigginton’s administrator above said. The first question presented by the record, then, is the effect of this indorsement. Is it absolute, or is it conditional ? The words of the indorsement, which must govern where they are free from doubt, are certainly without any express condition. They show that the right as to the time for bringing the suit was waived. To waive is to give up, to abandon, and relinquish. It leaves the thing abandoned as though it had never been. See Bouvier’s and Webster’s Dictionaries. The language used in the act is, “ The time for bringing the suit, as required by the two preceding sections, may be extended, or waived, by consent of the indorser or assignor in writing, signed by him.” Rev. Code, § 1853; also, §§ 1851, 1852. The contract of indorsement above set out conforms to this requirement of the law. It is an unconditional waiver of the right that existed before the waiver was made. The waiver does not mean a mere postponement of the time for bringing the suit, because the word extended, used in the same connection, which means postponement, is used in opposition to it. They are disjunctively connected, and are, consequently, intended to mean two things ; the one, to postpone, and the other to relinquish and altogether abandon the requisition to sue. But only the time for bringing the suit is waived, not the suit itself. It was still necessary, after the waiver, to sue ; and suit at any time before the statute of limitations barred the demand was sufficient.

2. Suit on the note was brought against the representative of Tarver in “ the year 1866.” This was in time. This suit was not prosecuted to judgment, because it was enjoined, and transferred to the chancery court. There it was continued by the proceedings on the insolvency of Tarver’s estate. But it is also shown that, after the suit was brought, Tarver’s estate was declared insolvent. This was a sufficient excuse for failing to comply with the other requisitions of the statute. Rev. Code, § 1854, cl. 6. Then, this objection must also fail to excuse and discharge the indorser from his liability on his indorsement.

3. Besides this, another objection is interposed to the complainant’s recovery in the court below. It is insisted that the claim against Wigginton’s estate, growing out of the contract of indorsement, is barred by the failure to present it in time to the administrator, so as to exclude the bar of eighteen months.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Ala. 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-wiggintons-administrator-ala-1874.