35 Ga. 66 | Ga. | 1866
We do not know whether much good will result from temporarily suspending this case. The defects complained of being more matters of form than substance; still, taking the direction that it has, devolving the liability originally incurred by eight persons on one only, he feels it, we suppose, a duty which he owes to himself to throw whatever obstacles he can in the way of a recovery.
On the 13th day of October, 1856, Amarine Shands, one of the firm of Shands & Co., sued out bail process against Andrew Howell, one of the defendants in the action, in which it is alleged that the seven persons whose names are above enumerated, and Andrew Mullinax, whose name was not before mentioned — making eight, instead of seven partners, acting under the name and style of A. Howell & Co., —are justly indebted to affiant on a foreign judgment from the State of California.
It is not to this latter variance, apparent on the face of the the declaration, that our objection is predicated. But the objection is, to offer a record from California, whereon a j udgment is recovered against eight persons to support an averment that the judgment was against seven only, as was evidenced by this record. The allegation and the proof do not agree. Who compose the firm of A. Howell & Co., who are alleged to be indebted to the plaintiffs the amount recovered by the California j udgment ?
Perhaps it would be as well to advert briefly to the law of contracts. Contracts are classified under three heads— 1. Contracts of record. 2. Contracts of specialty. 3. Simple contracts. A debt of record is a sum of money which appears to be due by the evidence of a Court of record. Such a contract has these peculiar properties, or characteristics :• It operates as an estoppel, and is conclusive between the parties. It effects, or works, a merger of the original cause of action. Thus: if a judgment be recovered fora debt due by bond, the debt thus becomes, by judicial proceeding, an act in law, transformed and metamorphosed into a matter of record, upon which latter security, whilst it remains in force and unreversed, the plaintiff’s remedy, if any, must, in such manner as the law allows, be had.
The doctrine of merger is thus explained by the Court of Exchequer in King vs. Hoare 13, M. & W. 494, 504: “ If there be a breach of contract, or wrong done, or any other cause of action by one against another, and judgment be recovered in a Court of record, the judgment is a bar to the original cause of action. Hence, the legal phrase, transit in rem, judicatura, derives its force and aptitude. The cause of action is changed into matter of record, which is of a higher nature, and the inferior remedy is merged in the higher. This remark equally applies, whether the cause of action be against a single person or many. The doctrine of merger holds not only where the original action was founded upon contract, but where it was founded upon a tort for wrong, independent of contract. The judgment in this latter case, as well as in the former, when obtained, constituting a contract of record in which the right of action ex delicto is wholly merged. If, therefore, one hath judgment to recover
We will now apply these remarks to the case in hand. We concede, therefore, that for the trespass committed in California, the plaintiffs had their election to proceed against the defendants as trespassers, either jointly or severally. They did proceed against them jointly, and obtained a verdict and judgment against them jointly. They must, therefore, regulate all their subsequent proceedings accordingly.
They instituted suit in Lumpkin county, jointly against the defendants, and two of the defendants are served, Andrew Howell and Andrew Mullinax, and non est inventus returned by the Sheriff as to the other defendants; whereupon, upon the plaintiff’s application, Mullinax is stricken from the writ, and the cause suffered to proceed alone against Howell, and the joint judgment rendered against eight persons in California, is offered in evidence to sustain the action against Howell alone.
To justify this proceeding counsel refer often, if they do not rely much upon the original cause of action. That the defendants were joint and several trespassers. I trust that the general observations made as to the doctrine of merger, entirely precludes any such reference. The original trespass is completely buried in the joint judgment, upon which this action is brought. It can only be treated as a joint liability, evidenced by the record from California.
But Section 3415 of the Codeis relied upon to justify this amendment. It reads thus, “ When two or more persons sue, or are sued in the same action, either on a contract or for a tort, the plaintiff may amend his declaration by striking out one or more of such defendants, and proceed against the remaining defendant or defendants if there is no other legal difficulty in the case.”
Just §o. But we apprehend the very difficulty which we
Is there any other case known in practice where this can be done, where the liability is joint? I do not affirm that there is not; what I do say is, that such a procedure cannot be helped, upon the idea of the original action being tresspass, the parties were jointly and severally liable. It has passed beyond this and can only be known now and treated as a joint debt, evidenced by a record, against which nothing can be alleged, but that there is no such record.
This section of the Code, like many others, is intended to subserve the ends of justice. Plaintiffs and defendants may be changed for this purpose, but never to work a wrong or injury to parties.
Section 3908 of the Code provides that, “ If judgment is entered jointly against several trespassers, and is paid off by one, the others shall bo liable to him for contribution,” and this is obviously right. Whether this provision is restricted to tresspasses committed since the adoption of the Code, or to those also before, and the judgment has not been paid since, is not in the case. If the latter construction should be adopted, then the discharge of Mullinax might affect the continuing liability of Howell. At any rate, is it competent for the plaintiff to dismiss one of the joint judgment debtors at this stage of the proceeding. This is merely the suggestion of the Judge who writes out the opinion.
And whether the common law rule obtained in California when this judgment was recovered, or the law of this State as it is now declared in the Code, does not appear.
Considering that the plea in abatement tendered by the defendant ought to have been allowed to be filed, and that it was in time, the exigency haying just occurred which made
Judgment reversed.