2 Mart. (N.S.) 422 | La. | 1824
delivered the opinion of the court. This action is brought against the defendant, as one of the sureties of the late Mi-chad Reynolds, marshal of the Louisiana district. The bond is in the penal sum of twenty thousand dollars, with the following condition: "That whereas the said Michael Reynolds was, on the 17th day of January 1815, appointed and commissioned by the president of the United States, to the office of marshal in and for the Louisiana district, and being desirous to enter upon the duties of said office. Now if the said Michael Reynolds, and such deputies as he may appoint under him, shall well and faithfully fulfil the duties of said office according to law, then this obligation to be null and void, or else to remain in full force and virtue."
The breach assigned by the plaintiff is, that in a certain suit pending in the district court for the Louisiana district, in which they were libellants, and in which judgment was finally rendered in their favour, the vessel and cargo libelled were ordered to be sold by the mar
To the petition containing this averment, the defendant pleaded. First, the general issue. Second, that the bond was given to the United States, and that the present plaintiffs have no right to claim the benefit thereof. Third, that the plaintiffs, by their own act, released the principal in the bond, and his sureties, from all responsibility thereon; and in a supplemental answer, he pleaded that six years had elapsed since the alleged breach, and the action was barred by prescription. To this answer, the plaintiffs filed what is in effect a replication : but which is called on the record, a supplemental petition ; wherein he states, that an appeal was taken from the judgment of the district court, and that the final decree of the supreme court of the United States, affirming said judgment, was not rendered until February in the year 1819.
It isquite true, as this argument assumes, that the defendant cannot be made responsible for the non-performance by the marshal, of acts other than those prescribed to him by the Vol. n.
The next ground of opposition to the plaintiffs’ right of recovery is, that there was no breach of duty by the marshal, until after he went out of office: that he was directed to hold the proceeds subject to the further order of the court, and that there was no default
It would not be doing justice to this part of the defendant's case, to consider this proposition alone, and without bringing into view at the same time, another argument which he urged with it, and which was this: That if the position which he assumed, with regard to the time, when the breach of duty by the marshal. took place, was unsound :-if, instead of depending upon a further order of the court, it took place the moment the money was received, that than the plaintiffs must, equally fail; because they have not commenced their action within the time prescribed by the act of congress for bringing suits on instruments of this kind. Both these propositions, it was contended, could not be wrong; for the destruction of one, necessarily established the other: a choice of either was therefore presented to the appellees, and it was said let them choose as they might, their action was lost.
This position, which was sustained on the argument of the cause, with remarkable force, made a considerable impression on us at the time it was offered, and has since received our most serious consideration; notwithstanding
The first step in the enquiry, is to ascertain when the breach of duty was committed by the marshal. The decrees under which the money now sued for, came into his hands, was made on the 9th and 10th of dune 1817; that of the former being in relation to the cargo, and the latter to the vessel. The language used in both is the same-that the property he sold, and the proceeds held subject to the further order of the court. This it is contended, authorised the marshal to hold them in his hands, until a further direction was given by the court respecting them. But in our opinion the marshal had no such right. An act of congress passed in the month of March preceding this transaction, and then in force, prescribed, “ that all monies which shall hereafter be paid into said court, or received by the officers thereof, in cases pending therein, shall be immediately deposited in the branch bank within the district, if there be one ; otherwise in some incorporated state bank within the district, in the name, and to the credit of the court.” This law, the officer for whom the
It was stronglyurged that the marshal was not obliged to deposit this money, until called on. The words of the statute exclude this idea. It directs to him deposit the money immediately after it is received; not to the credit of any particular person, but to that of the court. It was therefore his duty to do so, without any application on the part of those interested. We are supported in this construc- tion by a decision of the supreme court of the United States, reported in 9 Cranch, 212. That action, like this, was instituted against the sureties of a marshal; a variety of questio
We have now to consider whether it necessarily results from establishing this period as that, at which the breach of the bond took place, that the plaintiffs are barred by prescription.
In support of this position, the defendant relies on an act of congress already referred to, passed in the year 1806; which provides, “ that all suits on marshals bonds, if the right of action has already accrued, shall be commenced and prosecuted within three years after the passage of this act, and not afterwards. And all such suits, in case the right of action shall accrue hereafter, shall be commenced and prosecuted within six years after the said right of action has accrued, and not afterwards; saving nevertheless the rights of infants, fem coverts, and persons non compotes mentis." Ingersoll’s Digest, 402.
The breach complained of here, took place in June 1817, and the suit was not commenced
Several minor questions have been raised in the cause, which it is necessary to notice :-
It is objected that the account signed by the marshal, of the sales of the vessel and cargo, and found among his papers after his decease, was not legal evidence against the sureties.
We have no doubt that the document offered was legal proof, and that it was properly received. It was not correctly assimilated to memorandums which a man makes on loose pieces of paper, and which are found among his papers at his decease. It was an account drawn up by a public officer, in discharge of
It was urged that the bond did not appear to have been executed before the judge. The evidence however, establishes that it was ; and as to the objection that the sureties are not bound, because the marshal did not take the oath of office, we do not see how this default, or misfeasance, can protect them. He was marshal notwithstanding his neglect to do so, and cannot make one illegal act, a justification of another.
If the amount for which the property was sold, has not been collected, it was the duty of the defendants to have shewn it. The burthen of proof lay on those who were most cognizant of the fact. Again, the officer, by failing to
The evidence appears to us to support the verdict of the jury, and the judgment of the court below. It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decred, that the judgment of the district court be affirmed, with costs.