73 N.Y. 292 | NY | 1878
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *294
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *295 This is an action upon a bond dated 24th December, 1853, in a penalty of $500. It was executed by Robert L. Shannon as principal obligor, and by the defendant here as his surety, to John Beers, who died in the State of Pennsylvania, domiciled there after the giving of the bond and before the commencement of this action, leaving a last will and testament. The bond had a condition, reciting the conveyance by the principal obligor to Beers of a piece of land, and the payment of the consideration money, and the existence of a mortgage upon it and other lands, and the agreement of the principal obligor to discharge the piece of land from all liens and incumbrances, and especially from that mortgage; and declaring that if the principal obligor should, within two years from the date of the bond, cause all liens and incumbrances, including that mortgage, to be duly discharged of record, and indemnify Beers, then the bond to be void, otherwise to remain in force. The mortgage was not discharged of record, nor was it paid; but after the death of Beers it was foreclosed, and part of the piece of land conveyed to him by the principal obligor was sold at judicial sale.
The will of Beers was admitted to probate in Pennsylvania, and letters there issued to the plaintiff as executor.
The bond, at the time of the death of Beers, was in the possession of a person in Yates county in this State. The principal obligor then resided out of this State, and the surety, the defendant here, resided then in Monroe county, N.Y., and never since resided in Yates county. It is probable that the bond was actually in Yates county ever after the death of Beers.
Upon the fact that the bond was in Yates county, and upon papers purporting to be an exemplification from Pennsylvania of the will of Beers and the probate thereof, the surrogate's court of Yates county admitted the will to probate, and issued letters testamentary to the plaintiff.
The plaintiff brought this action against the obligors in the bond, but the principal was not served with process. *297
The first point made by the defendant is this: That the action is not brought by the plaintiff in a character representative of the deceased obligee. This is based mainly, upon the omission of the word "as" between the name of the plaintiff John L. Beers, and the description of him, "executor of, etc., of John Beers,deceased," in the title of the summons, and in the body of the summons, and in the title to the complaint. It is true, that without that word, in that position, it has been sometimes held that the addition to the name of the party is but a descriptiopersonæ, and does not give to him other than a personal or individual character in the action. But it has been held, on the other hand, that though there be nought in the title of the process or the complaint to give a representative character to the plaintiff, that the frame, and averments and scope of the complaint may be such, as to affix to him such character and standing in the litigation. Stilwell v. Carpenter, in Mem.,
It is suggested that the form in which the judgment was entered on the decision of the Special Term gives the recovery to the plaintiff personally. We think that more precision might have been profitably used in entering the judgment so as to show more exactly to whom the recovery was adjudged. But that is not the subject of review here. There is no exception, nor can there well be one. The remedy was patent and easy, by motion at Special Term to amend. Shand v. Hanly,
Another point presents the question, whether the surrogate's court of Yates county had jurisdiction to admit the will to probate and to issue letters to the plaintiff. By chapter 320 of the Laws of 1830 (sec. 16, pp. 384, 389), amending certain sections of the Revised Statutes (see 2 Edm. Stats., p. 68, § 68a), it is provided that wills of personal estate, duly executed by persons residing out of this State, according to the laws of the State in which the same were made, and duly admitted to probate there, may be produced to a surrogate in this State having jurisdiction, who may issue letters thereon, upon the production of a duly exemplified or authenticated copy thereof under the seal of the court in which the same shall have been proved. It will be seen that the surrogate must have jurisdiction. Jurisdiction could have been obtained in this case, only by the fact, that when the testator died in Pennsylvania, he left assets in the county of the surrogate in this State. 2 R.S., p. 66, § 46, sub. 3. There is clearly no other fact presented in the case to give jurisdiction. It is denied that that fact existed. But it was proved by Hiland G. Wolcott that he had the bond in his possession, from a time preceding the death of the testator, to a time within a year or two of the trial, which was in June, 1876, and that he then delivered it to the plaintiff or his counsel. It is not shown explicitly that Mr. Wolcott was a resident of Yates county. But the ground taken by the defendant at the trial was not that, nor that the bond had not in fact been in Yates county for the time specified by that witness. The ground taken conceded all that, and was, that though the bond was there, inasmuch as the defendant did not reside in that county, it could not properly be said that the testator left assets therein. So we will assume that the bond was in fact in the county of Yates before, and at the time of, the action of the surrogate of that county. We think that the presence of the bond there, though the principal obligor was out of this State, and the defendant resided in another county in this State, made out the fact of assets left in Yates county by the testator. *299 The following is a part of the definition of assets (2 R.S., p. 147, § 6, subs. 8 and 9): "Debts secured by mortgages, bonds, notes or bills; * * * things in action; * * * every other species of personal property. * * *" Clearly this bond and the right it gave was an asset of the testator. It is urged, however, that though an asset, it was not an asset anywhere but in the county where the obligors resided at the time of issuing the letters.Kohler v. Knapp, 1 Bradf., 241 is cited, in which it is said (at page 247): "The rule is that debts constitute assets where the debtor resides." If it be conceded that a debt upon simple contract follows the debtor, and has its situs where he has his abode; it is not so with a debt upon a bond it being a specialty. "The debt is where the bond is, being upon a specialty, but debt upon contract follows the person of the debtor; and this difference has been often agreed." Per ANDERSON, Ch. J.;Byron v. Byron, Cro. Eliz., 472. And so says Swinburne on Wills p. 439 (folio), part 6, § XI: "And those debts are said to be bona notabilia, where the bonds or other specialties are, and not where the debtors inhabit. But in case the debts are only by contract, without specialty, they are then to be esteemedbona notabilia, in the place where the debtor is." And so it is of judgments; locality is given them by the situs of the court where they are entered, and not of the abode of the debtor. (Gold v. Strode, Carthew, 148; Yeomans v. Bradshaw, id., 373.)
Another point presents the question, whether the copy of papers from the probate court in Pennsylvania was properly received in evidence. The case shows that the plaintiff offered, first in evidence, the original letters testamentary issued to the plaintiff by that court. The defendant objected to the same, only on the ground that the plaintiff did not sue in his representative capacity. That objection has been shown to be untenable. The plaintiff then offered in evidence an exemplified copy of the proof of the will, which contained a copy of the will. To this evidence the defendant "duly objected," says the case, and that the court *300 overruled "the objection." The point or points of the objection are not stated. It is claimed, now, that there was no proof that the person making the copy was authorized to make the same by the court in Pennsylvania, or that he was the officer which he assumed to be. It does not appear that this was the objection made upon the trial. It would rather seem that it was a reiteration of the objection then just made and passed upon, to wit, that the plaintiff did not sue in his representative capacity. At all events, what was the specific objection is not disclosed by record, nor does it appear that it was necessarily the one now stated. It is not needful that we consider whether that now made is tenable. It is not such an one as could not, by any possibility, have been obviated at the trial if then taken. In such case, it must appear distinctly that it was then relied upon and stated to the court.
The next point presents the question of damages.
The Special Term made a conclusion of law that the plaintiff was entitled to recover in this action $500, with interest thereon from the 24th day of December, 1855, as damages for the non-performance of the covenant contained in the bond. The $500 there named is plainly the penalty of the bond sued upon. The day from which the interest was reckoned, was the last day of the two years within which the obligors had to discharge the mortgage. So that the Special Term adopted as a rule of damages, that the defendant though a surety, was liable for the amount of the penalty of the bond, and for the interest on that amount from the day of the breach of the condition.
There are four ways in which it is possible for this action to be viewed by different minds, in considering this question of what is the proper judgment to be sought and the proper rule of damages; though all of them are not correct. First: That it is an action upon the covenant contained in the condition of the bond, for a non-performance thereof; and the complaint might well be treated as in an action of that kind; but it is not so treated by either party to it in the *301
briefs submitted. The courts below did not so treat it, and we will not go out of the way in which they have walked. Second: As a suit in equity, in the nature of one for the specific performance of a contract, praying judgment for a satisfaction of the mortgage and the discharge of it from record, or for the recovery of so much money as would suffice to pay the mortgage. (Farnham v. Mallory, 3 Keyes, 527.) The action here is not brought upon that theory. Third: That it is an action on a bond conditioned for the payment of money. This, we think, cannot be maintained. The bond is, in the language of YATES, J., inJuliand v. Burgott (11 J.R., 477-478), one "given for the performance of an act by a certain day." True, the payment of money enough would have satisfied the mortgage; but merely the payment of money would not have discharged it of record. Nor does it necessarily follow that it would not have been discharged of record as the result of something other than the payment of money. The case last above cited seems to be relied upon to show that the condition is, in effect, for the payment of money. We see nothing in it that so holds or so hints even. It does not appear, from the condition of the bond, that the payment of any specified sum or sums of money at any particular day would have fully satisfied it. The condition is, within two years from the date of the bond, to cause all liens and incumbrances which were on the premises on a certain day, including a mortgage which is specified in the condition, to be duly discharged of record, and to indemnify and save the obligor harmless from all costs, damages, or the like, which he might sustain on account of the same. No sum is named, save that it is said that that mortgage is for $1,000 and interest. Nor is any sum named in the complaint as that which the obligors ought to have paid and neglected to pay. It is not like Lyon v. Clark (
Then it falls within the purview of the Revised Statutes (2 R.S., § 5, p. 378, et seq.); see case last cited. It was needed that the plaintiff should assign in his complaint specific breaches for which he brought his action. (Section 5; Patterson v. Parker, 2 Hill, 598.) He has done so. It was needed that the tribunal should assess the damages of the plaintiff thereby and specify the amount. (Section 6.) This was done. The judgment would then be for the penalty of the bond, and further judgment that the plaintiff have execution for the damages so assessed. (Section 9.) This has not been done. It was entered otherwise. It was an irregularity, to be corrected by motion in that respect. But upon what evidence was the assessment of those damages made? And this question comes up under the exception to the conclusion of law. As stated above, the assessment seems to have been merely a casting of interest on the amount named in the penalty. But actual damages may not have been suffered to that amount. All the proof on the subject is this: The principal obligor sold to the plaintiff's testator a piece of land for $950; which were paid. On the land sold was a mortgage for $1,000; which was also upon other lands. By some undisclosed *303 agreement, the terms and bearings of which are not made known, the principal obligor was bound to pay but a portion of that mortgage — how great a portion is not shown — and that piece of land was bound, as to the other mortgaged premises, to pay but that portion. The mortgage was foreclosed, and a part only of the piece of land bought by the testator was sold at foreclosure sale. How much that part was, or what was the value of it, does not appear; nor is any fact shown by the testimony which fixes the actual damages of the plaintiff by that sale.
We think that there should have been some proof of the amount of the actual damage. It is plain that the provisions of the Revised Statutes above cited require that, in actions on such a bond as this, there should be a finding of the actual damages; and that, though the judgment be entered for the penalty, that there should be a further judgment for execution for the damages assessed, and that the execution issued in pursuance thereof should be indorsed for the collection of the damages thus assessed (§§ 9, 10), and a collection of the sum in any such case will be a satisfaction of the judgment until further breach of the condition of the bond. (Sections 11, 12.) It is useless to refer to the varying adjudications upon the subject of what the obligee may recover in an action on a bond in a penal sum, and with a condition underwritten. We think that the provisions which we have cited from the statutes must control this case. The principle which is enacted by them was declared in Dole v.Moulton (2 Johns. Cas., 205), where it was said that, if a bond is conditioned for the performance of a covenant, the penalty is not recoverable, and that quantum damnificatus is the true thing in issue. Lyon v. Clark (supra), is relied upon by the plaintiff; but, as we have seen, that was the case of a bond conditioned for the payment of money. Brainard v. Jones
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Some questions may arise as to what shall be deemed thequantum of damages; whether the value of the piece of land sold at the time of the sale, or the amount of the consideration paid therefor and interest; and whether the delay of the plaintiff to prosecute has affected him in the amount which he may recover. But these we will not anticipate. The sole question now undetermined being the amount which the defendant should pay, his liability to pay something being settled, this case may never appear again in the courts.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered.
All concur, except EARL, J, absent.
Judgment reversed.