2 Stew. 370 | Ala. | 1830
The plaintiff in error is understood to insist, that the judgment below should be reversed for the following reasons, viz. 1st. There was no error in the writ, declaration or other proceeding below. 2d. The plea in abatement included all the ground taken on the motion to arrest the judgment, and the defendants submitted to the correctness of the decision on the demurrer to that plea, by pleading over, and thereby waiving., their right to any advantage on account of that error. 3d. In arresting the judgment, the Circuit Court revised and reversed its own decision, which had been made in sustaining the demurrer to the plea .in abatement, which it could not do. 4th. That all the errors in the pleadings, if any. there be, are cured by the verdict.
In the case of Parks & Burke v. Greening,
The first is, “that there is no cause of action in the plaintiff’s declaration.” I understand this to mean, and it has been so argued by counsel, that the declaration is insufficient in not setting out the condition of the bond, and assigning breaches thereof. Previous to the statute, 8 and 9 William III., in actions instituted on penal bonds, the plaintiff had judgment and sued out execution for the full amount of the penalty, where a breach of the condi
But it 'is urged by the counsel for the defendant, that there is no instance in which the law authorizes Judges of County Courts, as such, to take bonds for the mere pay ment of money. That all the bonds which they are permitted to take officially, must be given with conditions, to be discharged by the performance of some duty; that the declaration must shew, that a bond thus taken, is not a
The second reason given on the motion in arrest of judgment, is, that “it does not appear from the proceedings in the said cause, that said James Davis had any right to commence an action.”
By an act passed in 1803,
By the 25th section of the act last referred to, it is provided that “bonds given by executors, administrators and guardians, and all other bonds taken in the said Court, shall be made payable to the said Chief Justice, and his successors in office. By the 39 th section of the same act, it is declared, “that in case any bond become forfeited, it shall and may be lawful for the Chief Justice of the Orphan’s Court, to cause the same to be prosecuted at the request of any party grieved by such forfeiture, and it shall not become void upon the first recovery,” &c. The
After the adoption of our constitution, and the admission of Alabama into the Union as a State, viz. in 1821, our County Court system was recognized; a County Court, consisting of one Judge, was established in each county, and in him was vested all the powers previously exercised by the Chief Justice of the Orphan’s' and County Court. The law making this change in the County Court system, enlarges, in some instances the jurisdiction of the Court, and specifies many of the powers of the Judge. It defines, at considerable length, the manner in which letters testamentary and of administration shall be granted by him, prescribes the form of a bond to be executed by executors, administrators or guardians, and in the same section in which that form is prescribed,
It is urged by the defendant’s counsel, that this provision is the one, and the only one, under which the action on the bond sued on in this case, could have been properly instituted; that it should have been brought “in the name of the person injured,” and not in that of the Judge of the County Court. It has already been decided by this Court, in the case of Murphy v. May,
The 20th section of this act of 1821, contains a provision which embraces, in its commencement, a bond of this description. It begins by declaring “that all bonds and reeoghizances, which may have been given or made payable to the justices of any County Court, or Orphan’s Court, or to the Chief Justice of such Courts, heretofore established by the laws of the Mississippi Territory, or of the Alabama Territory, or of this State, shall enure and
I come now to consider the 3d reason for the motion in arrest of judgment, viz. “there is nothing in the original writ which shews for whose use the suit is brought.” The object of the law in requiring that suits of this description shall be brought for the use of the person injured, or alleging himself so to be, has already been explained. In this way, the Judge of the County Courtis to be protected from responsibility for costs. This also, is the exposition given of the statute in the case just cited, of Murphy v. May, in which case a judgment sustaining a demurrer to the declaration on the ground that it did not appear for whose use the suit was brought, was affirmed. But it has no where been determined, that this should appear in the writ. In the present case, the declaration does set out, that the suit is brought for the use of Thomas W. Shear-on, thereby rendering him liable to a judgment for costs in the event of a successful defence. For my own part, how1ever, I should feel much inclined, were it necessary, to overrule the opinion in the case of Murphy v. May; that decision would seem to preclude the Judge of the County Court from protecting the rights of minors, by voluntarily instituting actions on the bonds of guardians, executors, &c. It certainly would never be determined, that if he saw the estate wasting away by the misconduct of persons filling these trusts, that it would not be in his power to protect the interests of infants, by instituting actions on the bonds of the trustees for their benefit, although they might be too young to be aware of the jeopardy in which
The 4th reason offered in arrest of judgment is, that the declaration does not shew what interest Thomas W. Shearon, for whose use the suit is prosecuted, has in the estate of Nancy Rogers, the infant, to secure whose rights the bond was given. It is clearly unnecessary that any thing of the kind should have been shewn by the plaintiff; whether the defendant would have been permitted by plea or otherwise, to bring this point before the Court, it is not necessary now do determine. It may probably be a- fact which the Judge of the County Court is alone to decide on, when the application is made to him to bring the suit; and it might render him responsible to those really interested, were he to permit a stranger, by the use of •his name, to recieve money to which others were entitled.
The subsequent reasons are included in those already considered. It has been argued, however, that the proceedings are fatal in not shewing that the person for whose use the suit is brought, had requested the plaintiff to institute the action. This is believed to be proved by the institution of the suit itself. Whenever an action is brought on a bond pf this description, for the use of any third person, it is to be inferred that he has directed the Judge of the County Court to bring the suit; and if this presumption be untrue, he has an easy mode of making it appear by dismissing the suit.
Since writing the foregoing, I have read the opinioii delivered in this Court, in the case of Fuqua v. Stone.
Il does not appear that any disposition was made by the Circuit Court, of the demurrer to the three first pleas of the defendant; and it was insisted by the defendant’s counsel in the argument, that if the judgment should be reversed, the cause should bo remanded, that the demurrer to those pleas may be disposed of. A majority of the
The Court here, therefore, must proceed to render such judgment on the verdict as should have been rendered by the Court below.
Judgment reversed and rendered for the plaintiff.
Minor’s Ala. R. 178.
See l Will-g1™3’ SaulMl'
See 1 Will’|ras’ Saund'
Laws of Ala. 583-
Sec 13, page 196.
1 Stewai-t’a R‘
1 Stewart's R. 436.