From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Tootle-Campbell Dry Goods Co. v. Knott

Supreme Court of Arizona
Mar 5, 1934
43 Ariz. 210 (Ariz. 1934)

Summary

concluding that a dismissal with prejudice of a case against defendants in their individual capacity barred a future suit on that theory but did not bar suit against them in their representative capacity

Summary of this case from Laurence v. Salt River Project Agric. Improvement & Power Dist.

Opinion

Civil No. 3362.

Filed March 5, 1934.

1. EXECUTORS AND ADMINISTRATORS. — Executor who incurs liabilities on behalf of estate which he is not authorized by law to create is responsible for them individually.

2. EXECUTORS AND ADMINISTRATORS. — Where complaint alleged purchases by defendants as individuals and proof showed purchases as executrices but failed to show lack of authority, dismissal of complaint was proper.

3. APPEAL AND ERROR. — Plaintiff's suggestion of amendment, after defendant's motion to dismiss, court's announcement that continuance in such case would be necessary, and plaintiff's silence thereafter, presented nothing for review as regards court's alleged refusal to permit amendment.

4. JUDGMENT. — That formal judgment dismissed action with prejudice, and minute entry recited that motion to dismiss was granted, did not require reversal, since legal effect of each was the same.

5. JUDGMENT. — Presumption is that dismissal of case after hearing on merits was with prejudice, unless it is expressly stated that dismissal was without prejudice.

6. JUDGMENT. — Dismissal of action against defendants in individual capacity would bar another action on same theory, but not action on theory that they were liable for having attempted to bind estate as executrices without legal authority.

See 11B Cal. Jur. 280, 11 R.C.L. 166 (4 Perm. Supp., p. 2892).

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of the County of Navajo. P.A. Sawyer, Judge. Judgment affirmed.

Mr. Thorwald Larson, for Appellant.

Mr. Sidney Sapp, Mr. C.H. Jordan and Mr. Guy Axline, for Appellees.


Tootle-Campbell Dry Goods Company, a corporation, hereinafter called plaintiff, brought suit against Rose Scorse Knott and her husband, John Doe Knott, E.B. Newman and his wife, Julia Scorse Newman, and John Doe Chambers and his wife, Ellen Scorse Chambers, hereinafter called defendants, alleging that they were doing business under the trade name and style of the H.H. Scorse Estate. The case was tried to the court, and after plaintiff had rested, on a motion of defendants a judgment of dismissal was rendered, and after the usual motion for new trial was made and overruled, this appeal was taken.

The vital issue involved herein is whether the complaint stated a cause of action against the women defendants, as executrices of the estate of Henry Scorse, deceased, for purchases made by them as such executrices on behalf of the estate, when they had no legal authority to do so. It is unnecessary for us to set forth the complaint in full. We are satisfied, upon a careful examination of it, that it alleged only a purchase of the goods in question by them as individuals. It is true that in the second cause of action it refers to the women defendants as executrices, but nowhere therein does it state that the purchases in question were made by them as such, or were made without authority of law.

It is the undoubted law that when an executor incurs liabilities on behalf of the estate, which he is not authorized by law to create, he is responsible for them individually. But an action attempting to charge him on this theory requires very different allegations from an action which charges him with having incurred the liability in his individual and not his representative capacity, and is subject to very different defenses. If, therefore, the complaint does not state facts which show a liability of this nature, no defense thereto can be pleaded, and no issue joined thereon. The evidence offered by plaintiff showed affirmatively that the indebtedness, on which the action was founded, was not incurred by defendants in their individual capacity. Under those circumstances, defendants moved to dismiss the action, and the court properly granted the motion and rendered judgment to that effect.

Plaintiff contends that it moved to amend the pleadings to show liability on account of illegal acts of the executrices, as such, but that it was denied that privilege. We have examined the record and cannot find any such motion and ruling. The nearest the record comes to showing such a state of facts was a suggestion by plaintiff that he would like to amend, and a statement of the court that if an amendment was allowed there would have to be a continuance of the case. Plaintiff thereafter said nothing further in regard to an amendment. We think this was insufficient to be considered a motion to amend and an overruling thereof.

The second objection is that the formal written judgment signed by the court, is to the effect that, "It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that this action be, and the same is hereby dismissed with prejudice" (italics ours), while the minute entry which, under the decisions of this court, is the real judgment, reads only, "Motion to dismiss is granted." The minute entries also show that the written judgment was presented to the trial judge and, before his signature was attached, was objected to by plaintiff, and the objection overruled. We think, in effect, this might well be considered as an amendment by the court of its rendition of judgment, shown by the previous minutes. But regardless of this, the effect of the first minute entry is the same as that of the written judgment. After a case has been heard on the merits, and is dismissed, unless it is expressly stated that the dismissal is without prejudice, it is presumed to be with prejudice. 34 C.J. 788, and cases cited.

The action being against defendants for purchases made by them in their individual capacity, the judgment of dismissal is a perpetual bar to another suit against them on that theory, but does not bar an action on the theory that they, as executrices, made purchases unauthorized by law, on behalf of the estate of their decedent.

There are a number of other questions raised by plaintiff in its brief, but, while we have considered them, we think it unnecessary to discuss them.

The judgment of the superior court of Navajo county is affirmed.

ROSS, C.J., and McALISTER, J., concur.


Summaries of

Tootle-Campbell Dry Goods Co. v. Knott

Supreme Court of Arizona
Mar 5, 1934
43 Ariz. 210 (Ariz. 1934)

concluding that a dismissal with prejudice of a case against defendants in their individual capacity barred a future suit on that theory but did not bar suit against them in their representative capacity

Summary of this case from Laurence v. Salt River Project Agric. Improvement & Power Dist.
Case details for

Tootle-Campbell Dry Goods Co. v. Knott

Case Details

Full title:TOOTLE-CAMPBELL DRY GOODS COMPANY, a Corporation, Appellant, v. ROSE…

Court:Supreme Court of Arizona

Date published: Mar 5, 1934

Citations

43 Ariz. 210 (Ariz. 1934)
29 P.2d 1056

Citing Cases

State v. Continental Oil Co.

Lee and Natwick. Cases such as U.S. v. Cohen Grocery Company, 255 U.S. 81, Cline v. Frink Dairy Company, 274…

Laurence v. Salt River Project Agric. Improvement & Power Dist.

Both the C.J.S. provision cited by DeGraff and our cases before DeGraff align with this view. See 27 C.J.S.…