delivered his opinion.
The bill in this case seems to have been carelessly and inaccurately drawn. It states, that Mien had gotten a judgment at law, against Reuben Johnson and Gilliam, his appearance bail; whereas the judgment, as the record shews, was against R. Johnson and John I. Johnson and R. C. Gilliam, sureties for the defendant’s appearance.
Upon the case made by the record, I do not think equity can interfere, without overstepping the proper line of its jurisdiction, and doing much mischief. The laws of the land give the plaintiff a right in his suit at law, to require bail in such actions as this; and by the regular operation of law, unless the bail takes the proper steps to relieve himself, he becomes bound for the debt. If this happens without any agency or participation of the plaintiff, I hold it to be the general rule, liable to very few exceptions, that no tribunal has a right to take from him his advantage; and this has been the language of this Court.
In Croughton v. Duval, 3 Call, 69, they say that though sureties are favoured in equity, fair creditors are favourites also, and will not be deprived of their legal rights without some fraud or neglect. Here the creditor has gotten a legal right, without the least shadow of fraud; and as to negligence, it is all on the other side.
In Anderson v. Anderson, 2 Call, 198, a marriage settlement was not recorded, and equity was asked to interfere, upon the ground that the failure to record was through the fraud of the husband, and ought not to prejudice the rights of the feme covert. The Court said, that equity would not interpose in such a case, though the recording were prevented by accident, or unavoidable necessity, or even fraud, if the creditors were neither parties nor pri
But, the bail here has been guilty of negligence. Taking his evidence in its utmost latitude, and giving it full faith and credit, it proves only this: that Gilliam went to the clerk's table, during the session of the Court, and told the clerk that he had come for the purpose of entering himself special bail in the suit of Allen v. Johnson, and the clerk said it should be attended to. Now, this was no entry of
But the case before us could not come within Dunlops v. Laporte, taken in its utmost extent. Here there were two persons taken as appearance bail, John I. Johnson and Gilliam; and though it should be said, that by failing to except, the sufficiency of these two, as special bail, is admitted, it cannot follow that the sufficiency of one of them is admitted.- By the same rule it might be said, that if twenty persons were taken as appearance bail, a failure to except to the whole would be an admission that any one
I think the decree must be affirmed.
