Harding v. Griffin

7 Blackf. 462 | Ind. | 1845

Dewey, J.

— Assumpsit. The plaintiff, being a non-resident and having been ruled to give security for th? costs, filed a *463bond conditioned that she “should pay all costs which she should be adjudged to pay to the defendant, or to the officers o'f Court.” The defendant moved the Court to dismiss the action for the want of a sufficient bond. The motion was overruled. The declaration contained the common counts, Among other pleas, the defendant pleaded thé general issue, with notice of set-off. The notice was in general terms, containing the substance of the common counts of a declaration. The defendant’s bill of particulars, .furnished at the request of the plaintiff, contained the following item, viz.: “ October 11th, 1837, cash 100 dollars.” Trial by the Court, and judgment for the plaintiff.

On the trial, the defendant offered in evidence a receipt dated October 11th, 1837, -and signed by the plaintiff, by which she acknowledged that she had received of the defendant, as the executor of one Holmes, 100 dollars, part of a legacy left her by Holmes. The object of the defendant was to show, by the receipt and other evidence, that he had overpaid to the plaintiff the legacy given her by Holmes, to the amount contained in the receipt. The plaintiff objected to the receipt, and it was excluded,

. The errors assigned are the overruling the motion to dismiss the action for want of security for the costs, and the rejection of the receipt as evidence.

As to the first point, the statute requires suits commenced by non-residents to be dismissed, unless the plaintiff shall file a bond with surety, conditioned for the payment “ of all costs which may accrue in the action, either to the defendant, or the officers of the Court.” R. S. 1843, p. 675. We have decided, under a similar statute, that a bond which stipulated that the plaintiff should pay the costs which might accrue in the cause, “provided judgment should be given against him,” was insufficient; and that the action was properly dismissed for that reason. Hunt v. Butcher, 5 Blackf. 341. We see no material difference between the bond in that case and the one under consideration. Neither afforded any security to the officers of the Court for their fees, in the event of the suit’s resulting in favour of the plaintiff. One object of both statutes was to make the officers secure, let the action terminate as it might. It would have been proper, *464> had the Circuit Court dismissed this action, because the bond _did not effect that object. But we do not think the refusal to do so is an error of which the defendant can complain. His costs were amply secured by the bond; he, therefore, sustained no injury by the decision of the Circuit Court.

O. H. Smith, H. O’Neal, and S. Yandes, for the plaintiff, W. W. Wick and L. Barbour, for the defendant.

As to the other point, we do not think the rejection of the receipt as evidence was erroneous. The defendant’s legal evidence was confined to his bill of particulars, which was in the form of an account between the parties, individually; and the charge of 100 dollars, on the 11th of October, 1837, was an item of that account; it purported to be an ordinary charge of cash by one individual against another. The receipt was a link in a proposed chain of evidence, having for its object to show that the defendant, in the capacity of executor, had overpaid the plaintiff a legacy left her by the testator represented by the defendant. The general charge of 100 dollars cash, in the bill of particulars, was not calculated to apprize the plaintiff of such a design, and to induce her to be prepared with such rebutting testimony as might have been in her power.

Per Curiam.

— The judgment is affirmed with 3 per cent. damages and costs.