1 Ala. 543 | Ala. | 1840

COLLIER, C. J.

— The plaintiffs insist that the judgment of the circuit court, is erroneous and assign the following.causes:

1st. Because it failed to dispose of the demurrer to the notice and to sustain the same,

2d. The judgment is rendered upon the allegations contained in the notice, without specifying the particular default for which the plaintiffs in error were charged, though the notice contained two distinct grounds.

3d. Neither the notice nor the facts and proofs disclosed by the record, nor both, authorized the judgment of the circuit court; it not appearing, either that the defendants (below) had the three days’ notice prescribed by law, or that it was proved that there was any judgment authorizing the issuance of the execution which it is alledged the sheriff Bondurant did not return.

4th. The amount of the judgment of the circuit court is greater than the sum claimed in the notice.

5th. The discontinuance by the defendants in error, as to three of the parties against whom the notice proceeds was fatal to the entire proceeding.

*5471. It may well be questioned whether by the agreement of the parties to submit “ the matters and things and the proof” to the determination of the court, the demurrer of the plaintiffs in error, was not waived. But conceding that the question of law it proposed to raise was one of “ the matters” submitted to the court, yet this assignment is not well taken. Without pretending to admit that in a motion against the sheriff and his sureties, under our statutes, for a default of duty, it would be irregular to embrace in the notice two distinct causes, we are satisfied that the notice contemplates proceeding for a single default only. True, it charges the sheriff with having received the amount of the execution and alledges that the same was demanded of him by the defendants in error; but it then proceeds to aver a failure to return the execution according to law, and informs the plaintiffs in error, that a motion will be made against them, for such failure of Bondurant as sheriff. Not the remotest intimation is given that a judgment will be asked for, on the ground of the failure to pay over money, and the notice would not authorize a motion to that effect. The allegations then in regard to the receipt of money, and the refusal to pay it on demand, may be considered as superfluous, and cannot prejudice, or in any degree affect the notice, the character of which must be ascertained by a reference to the motion, which it indicates will be made. It is then entirely immaterial whether the demurrer was disposed of or not, since, as it should not have been sustained, the omission is an error that could not operate an injury to the plaintiffs, and consequently they cannot avail themselves of it.

2. The second cause assigned for error, so far as it asserts that the notiee contains two distinct grounds of proceeding, we have seen, is not sustained by the record. The motion and the judgment appear, most clearly from the record, to constitute but one entry, simultaneously made. This entry indicates with precision the character of the motion, and the court explicitly declare, that the facts alledged in the notice have been fully proved by the defendants in error. Here, then, we see that “ the par*548ticular default, for which the defendants in error were charged,” is clearly set forth in the judgment.

3. The notice we have seen, is obnoxious to criticism, as being too verbose, yet the excess of words is entireiy harmless, and does not affect its legal sufficiency.

The facts stated in the record to have been proved in the circuit court, are not it is true, set forth with technical precision; yet it is conceived that they are sufficient to have authorized its judgment. There was no necessity for showing that the plaintiffs in error, had notice of the motion intended to be submitted against them, by coming into court and referring the case to its decision, they either admitted that they were duly served with notice, or else consented to waive it. Though in summary proceedings of this character, great strictness is required; yet it has been held, that where an is3ue is tried by a jury, the verdict will ascertain the defendants liability, as in other cases where suits are prosecuted in the ordinary mode, and that “it is unnecessary to encumber the record either with the proof or fact of notice, or of those facts which constitute the liability for the debt.” Curry v. The Bank of Mobile, (8 Porter’s Rep. 373.) The reason of this decision, so far as respects the notice, is, that by, submitting to plead to issue, the defendant admits himself regularly in court; so in the present case, by consenting to a trial and agreeing that the judge should become the arbiter both of the law and the facts, the plaintiffs in error must be understood to have made a like concession.

It was not a proper subject of inquiry upon the trial of the motion, whether the execution issued upon a regular judgment. “ If the execution issued from competent authority, and was duly authenticated, it was not for the sheriff in defence of the rule, to say that the execution was irregular, or to know whether it was founded on a proper judgment or not. Its mandate was imperative, and he was bound to obey it. In no conceivable case, should an execution be quashed on the motion of the sheriff, to whom it had been delivered to be executed. Anderson v. Cunningham, (Minor’s Rep. 48.) In the Tombeckbee Bank v. *549Godbold, 3 Stew’t. Rep. 240,) which was cm action for a false return against the defendant, as the sheriff of Monroe, prosecuted according to the course of the common law, it was held that as the recovery must be graduated by the extent of the injury sustained, it was important to show that the execution was issued upon a judgment. That case is entirely unlike the present; here the proceeding is for the enforcement of a liability imposed by statute — the amount and the condition on which the recovery is to be had. is certain and fixed, depending upon the fact whether an execution bearing upon its face the indicia of regularity, jwas received and returned according to law.

It has been repeatedly determined that in a proceeding of this character the measure of the recovery must be the amount of the execution with interest. McWhorter et al. v. Marrs, (1 Stew. Rep. 63,) and that the plaintiff is entitled to interest though it is not specifically demanded by the notice.

In Curry v. The Bank of Mobile, (8 Porter Rep. 372) which was a motion by the defendant in error, against the plaintiff as the indorser of a promissory note — in the transcript of the record, there was a notice and certificate of the president of the bank copied at length — the judgment recited them thus; “prodm-ecl the notice with the certificate of the president of the bank indorsed thereon.” The court held that the recital of the notice and certificate made them a part of the record. In the case before us, the notice is referred to in terms even more explicit than in the case cited, and consequently may be looked to, if necessary, to sustain the judgment.

4. It would have been more formal to have expressed in the judgment, the amounts of the execution and interest separately, instead of stating their aggregate amount. But upon calculating interest from the date of the execution, we find that the judgment does not exceed the sum, which the defendants in error were entitled to recover, and the informality of the judgment, as it does not prejudice the plaintiffs, furnishes no ground for a reversal.

5. The entry of a discontinuance as to some of the persons *550who are styled in the notice, the securities of the sheriff, could not affect the proceeding against the others. It does not appear that they had been served with notice, or that they had agreed to waive it — in the judgment entry the defendants in error discontinue, as. to three who are said to be securities, and then with the consent of the sheriff and the other sureties, submit the case upon “the proof” to the decision of the court. The parties then as to whom the discontinuance was entered, do not appear from the record, ever to have been in court — and even if the discontinuance furnished a legal advantage to the plaintiffs, it may well be questioned, whether by consenting to a trial, they have not waived it.

In Lyon v. The State Bank, (1 Stew’t. Rep. 442) the court say that “ a proceeding by motion or notice is essentially different in this respect, from a common law suit. In this form, the notice is no part of the record, but evidence only. If not served or not proceeded on, it is a nullity. An alias could not issue on it, nor would a discontinuance be necessary to authorize a proceeding de novo. The motion recognized only the person notified as a party defendant. No express discontinuance was necessary. Here is an authority to show that the discontinuance was unnecessary, and consequently could not prejudice the judgment of the circuit court.

This view is decisive of the questions raised, and our conclusion is, that the judgment must be affirmed.

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