Morrison v. Warner
Morrison v. Warner
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
In August, 1885, plaintiff, B. G. Morrison, as administrator of S. R. Morrison, sold land of his decedent to Warner, in consideration, inter alia, of a mortgage of $10,000 from Warner to plaintiff, as administrator. Six days later Warner sold back the land to plaintiff individually and to C. F. Morrison and Mrs. Shearman, two of the terre-tenants in the present action, subject to the said mortgage which the three purchasers, who were heirs of the decedent, jointly assumed to pay. The present action is a scire facias on the mortgage, by plaintiff, administrator, mortgagee, to the use of himself individually against the mortgagor, Warner, and plaintiff’s two joint copurchasers as terre-tenants. A joint obligor thus brings suit against the other obligors, omitting himself, not for contribution but so far as the record shows, on the original obligation for its full amount. If the suit had been for contribution, plaintiff would have had to prove his payment for the common benefit of more than his just share of the common obligation. There is as yet no such proof in the case and the burden cannot be escaped by any such ingenious mode of procedure.
But the other obligors, terre-tenants, filed an affidavit of defense in which they averred, inter alia, paragraph eight, that the mortgage “has been paid in full to B. G. Morrison, administrator, by the above named parties, to wit: Mary E. Shearman, Chas. F. Morrison and Byron G. Morrison.” It is true that they go on to state in some detail how the payments were made, and the affidavit is perhaps fairly open to the criticism of the learned judge below, that they do not state specifically how much of the money paid was furnished by themselves. But Mrs.’ Shearman filed a supplemental affidavit in which she averred that the money employed by plaintiff in his individual capacity, if any, for purchase of the balance of the mortgage from himself as administrator, belonged to the estate, of which the terre-tenants were heirs, and on a final adjudication of his third account, the plaintiff had been adjudged to have in his hands money of the estate more than sufficient to pajr any unpaid balance of this mortgage.
These affidavits though desultory and lacking in precision, nevertheless set out a clear prima facie defense. The learned judge below with much patience and care went over the whole
Judgment reversed and procedendo awarded.
Reference
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- Practice, O. P.— Parties to action—Suit by joint obligor. A suit by a joint obligor against his eo-obligors on the original obligation for its full amount is irregular. His right is to contribution only and must be sustained by proof that he has paid more than his due share of the joint obligation. Affidavit of defense—Entry of judgment. Where an affidavit of defense makes out a clear prima facie defense, the court on a rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense has no authority to go into the whole matter in detail, and arrive at a conclusion as to a balance due to plaintiff, and enter judgment for an amount not claimed by the plaintiff on the record nor admitted by defendant to be due. This is not the province of a judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense, which must accept the averments of the affidavit as verity. If it is to be overcome, it should be by facts judicially ascertained in the regular wajr.