9 Gratt. 323 | Va. | 1852
This is a proceeding by the representative of Jonathan Thomas, late sheriff of Grayson county, to recover from Samuel Cox, his deputy, and his co-obligors in a bond to the sheriff, the amount of a judgment recovered against the administratrix of the sheriff by the surviving executor of William Bourn deceased, on account of the default of the deputy. The proceeding was had upon the same bond referred to in the former case between these-parties, and the same objections to the validity of the bond were relied on, and were then disposed of.
In this case it does not appear from the evidence as set out, that the execution with the return of the deputy was produced. The judgment" against the administratrix of the sheriff, recites that the notice *against her was to recover money collected by the deputy on an execution which issued out of the County court of Grayson on the 29th day of August 1833, in favor of William Bourn, which came to the hands of Samuel Cox as deputy of Thomas, the high sheriff of the county, who had returned that- he had received the amount of the execution. The whole evidence consisted of the notice, the judgment aforesaid, and the bond, the execution of which was proved. And in the absence of all other proof the- judgment furnished prima facie evidence against the deputy and his sureties of the- facts therein recited, and showed that the representative of the sheriff had been subjected to a liability for the default of the deputy, as in the notice alleged.
Nor is there anything to show that the recovery of the creditor against the sheriff or his administratrix, was barred by the statute of limitations. It does not appear when the proceeding was instituted against the representative of the sheriff, or what defence was made to the notice. It was-sufficient for the defendant in error -to make out a prima facie case entitling her to recover. If the statute of limitations or any other matter would have constituted a valid defence, the proof should have come from the plaintiffs in error. The judgment against the administratrix must be presumed to be correct in the absence of all proof to the contrary.
The last objection to the recovery is of a more serious-character. It appears upon the face of the judgment that the execution
*The objection to the validity of the judgment is not well founded for another reason: It does not certainly appear that the proceeding commenced in the Circuit court. It may have been instituted in the County court and removed to the Circuit court, or have been retained in the Circuit court upon a reversal of a judgment of the county court. The court in favor of the judgment would if necessary be bound to presume that such was the fact, and it was the duty of the other side to have produced the whole record to repel such presumption, if he intended to raise the question. I think there is no error in the judgment, and that it should be affirmed.