5 Fla. 364 | Fla. | 1853
This was an action of debt, which was prosecuted in the Court below by the respondent against the appellant, as one of the sureties in a replevin bond. The original suit was brought by the appellee against the firm of John N. C. Stockton & Co., and the attachment issued therein was levied upon certain slaves, as the property of the defendants, which slaves were replevied upon a bond executed by the said firm of John N. Stockton & Co., by their attorney W. T. Stockton, and by Hanson Kelly and the appellant as sureties thereto. The declaration in the present case is in the usual form, setting forth the issue and the levy of the attachment upon certain slaves, specified by name; the release of the property upon the bond; the prosecution of the original suit to final judgment and execution ; a return of nulla bona by the proper officer on the writ, of fierifacias, and the breach of the condition of the bond, “that the said John N. C. Stockton & Co. did not “ cause the said slaves (therein named) to be forth-coming, “ to abide the final order of the Superior Court for the “ County of Walton, according to the tenor and effect of “ the writing obligatory, &c., although often requested, &c.”
The appellant, inter alia, craved oyer of the bond, and the same being set out, pleaded “ that at the time of and “ prior to the institution of the said suit by attachment, in “ the said Superior Court of Walton County, to-wit: on
To this plea the plaintiff below replied, “that Richard “ O. Stockton ‘ and William B. Stokes, as surviving part- “ nors of the firm of John N. C. Stockton & Co., appeared “ and pleaded to said attachment suit in the plaintiff’s “ declaration mentioned, and that the judgment in the “ said plaintiff’s declaration mentioned was rendered in '“ the said attachment suit against the said surviving part- “ ners, in and by the name and style of John N. O. Stock- '“ ton & Co.” To this replication there was a demurrer and .joinder therein, on which the judgment of the Court below was. against the demurrer, and it is upon alleged errors in this judgment that the present appeal is founded.
No attempt is made in this Court to sustain the replication against the force and effect of the appellant’s demurrer ; but tlie respondent, invoking the familiar principle that a demurrer opens all the previous pleading, avers that the plea is insufficient upon various grounds, some of which will he noticed hereafter.
In like manner the counsel for -appellant, in addition to his s-upport of tlie plea, contends that the declaration- docs not show a sufficient cause of action, because of tlie uncertainty and consequent invalidity of the defeasance or condition of the bond, which point being considered first in order, will be first disposed of.
It is argued that as the recital in tlie condition of the bond does not mention the number, names, sex or ages of the slaves levied upon, but simply recites “ that whereas “ tlie said Nicholos H. Mitchell has sued out of the Superior Court of Walton County an attachment against the
We now proceed to the consideration of the plea. It is urged by the counsel for the appellant, in support of the plea, that the fact alleged therein, namely, the death of John N. C. Stockton, before the institution of the suit, renders the judgment void for want of notice ; that if void as to him, it is void as to his co-partners, even if they had been sued in the original action properly, by their individual names, and not under the terms “ & Co.,” as ho supposes the record to be, and therefore there has not been any “ final order of the Court,” which, according to the condition of the bond, the appellant had covenanted to abide by. And on the other hand, it is contended, on the part of respondent, that the appellant is estopped by his bond, as well as by the judgment rendered, to allege the fact of the death of John N. O. Stockton before the institution of the suit; and that, if he is in a position to make the defence, still it does not render the judgment void, but voidable only; and that the effect of the judgment cannot be voided thus collaterally, but only by the regular modes
The law of estoppel, says Mr. J. Taunton, in Bowman vs. Taylor, (2 Add. El. R., 278,) is not so unjust or absurd as it has beeen too much the custom to represent. The principle is, that where a man has entered into a solemn engagement, by and under his hand and seal, as to certain facts, he, shall not be permitted to deny any matter which he has so asserted. And not only is the deed conclusive, on the party executing it, as to the very point intended to be effected by the instrument, but also as to any facts stated or recited in it. 2 Smith Lead. Ca., 456, and authorities cited. The party is denied the right of setting up the truth whenever it is in plain and clear contradiction to his former allegations and acts.
The appellant here, on the 13th January, 1840, and after the institution of the original suit, and the levy of the attachment, joins with John N. C. Stockton & Co., and as one of the sureties, in the making and delivery of the replevin bond, as if the said John N. C. Stockton was .in life and being, and thus procures the release of the property levied upon under the attachment; and shall he be permitted now to aver that the same John N. C. Stockton was not only then dead, but vras so before the institution of the suit ? The inconsistency and contradiction between this allegation and the act of joining with John N. C. Stockton in the execution of the bond, is so glaring that it need only be stated to be apparent. Counsel have endeavored to avoid the effect of this estoppel by urging that the bond does not profess to be executed by John N. C. Stockton in his proper person, but that John N.' O. Stockton & Co. executed it by their attorney, ~W\ T. Stockton. This fact makes no difference. A dead man can no more have an attorney in fact than he can be a party to a suit
The doctrine of estoppel by deed is generally recognized and enforced in the United States, as well as in England. See cases collected in 2 Smith Lead. Ca., 555. Thus in Cutler vs. Dickinson, 8 Pick. R., 387, the obligors in an administration bond were held to be estopped by the recital therein that their principal had been regularly appointed administrator. The replevin bond being,the foundation of the action, and the declaration alleging, in the terms of the instrument, that it was made and delivered by the defendant, and the other obligors, the estoppel is apparent on the face of the record, and advantage may therefore be taken of it on the demurrer. Browman vs. Taylor, 2 Ad. & E. R., 278; Hill vs. Manchester Waterworks Co., 2 Barn. & Ad. R., 244; and see Veale vs. Warner, 2 Wms. Saunders R., 325, a. n. The conclusion therefore, which we have reached is, that the appellant is estopped by his deed from asserting the fact, although it may be true, that before and at the time of the execution of the bond, John N. C. Stockton was dead. And this relieves the Court from the necessity of considering the question so elaborately discussed at the bar, whether the judgment of a Court of general jurisdiction may be collaterally impeached by matters dehors the record, as to its jurisdiction over the person of the parties ; or whether the defect of jurisdiction of the person must appear on the face of the record, to entitle it to consideration ; or whether, if such Court of general jurisdiction assumes authority to act, and pronounces a judgment, such authority can be inquired
The appellant being estopped by his deed from asserting the death of his co-obligor, John N. C. Stockton, before and at the time of its execution, and as the Superior Court of the late Territory of Florida was a Court of general jurisdiction, this Court, acting upon the maxim, omniapresumuntv/r rite esse aeta, must presume a jurisdiction of that Court over the persons of John N. C. Stockton & Co., up to the time of the execution of the replevin bond, and we will now proceed to the consideration of the plea, as an averment of the death of John N. C. Stockton, intermediate the execution of the bond and the rendition of the judgment in the attachment suit. It is considered by respondent’s counsel that in this view the plea is liable to twro objections — 1st. That the appellant is estopped by
Both objections we think well taken, and either would suffice to prove that the plea in this regard is bad in substance. It is true as urged by the counsel for the appellant, that he was not a party to the judgment, but it is equally true that he was in privity with the defendants therein, and concluded with them by its force and effect. The ground upon which persons standing in the relation of privity to the litigating party are bound by the proceedings to which he was a party, is, that they are identified with him in interest, and whenever this identity is found to exist, all are alike concluded. Thus, if one covenants for the results or consequences of a suit between others, as if he covenants that a certain mortgage assigned by him shall produce a specific sum, he thereby connects himself in privity with the proceedings, and the record of the judgment in that suit will be conclusive evidence against him. 1 Greenl. on Ev., § 523; Rapelye vs. Prince, 4 Hill N. Y. Rep., 119. So, in the case at bar, the appellant bound and obliged himself to the respondent, and covenanted with him, by the writing obligatory sued upon, that the said defendants in the attachment suit, John N. C. Stockton & Co., would cause the said slaves levied upon, and replevied by said bond, tobe forthcoming to abide the final order of the Court in the said suit, and thus connected himself in privity with the proceedings herein, and made the record of the judgment conclusive evidence against him. In Bacon’s Abr., tit. Error, A., it is laid down, “ if a man recovers against u the principal, and sues a scire facias against the bail, w they cannot say the principal died before the judgment, “ and so by plea avoid the judgment, for it is against the record.”
There are other objections to the plea, some of which have been presented in the argument, and others have suggested themselves to the Court in the consideration of the case, but as those which we have passed upon go to the very substance -of the matter jdeaded, it is deemed unne*
Per totam curiam. The judgment of the Circuit Court of the Western Circuit, sitting in the County of Escambia, rendered in this cause, is hereby affirmed, with costs..