4 Me. 124 | Me. | 1826
In October 1817, judgment was recovered against the defendants for the whole penalty of the bond, which they and Osgood had signed as the sureties of McMillan. Allen, a creditor of McMillan, had execution for a part of said penalty. Afterwards Palmer, having obtained a judgment against McMillan's executors, sued a scire facias against the defendants to obtain satisfaction of his judgment also out of said penalty; and in March
The second objection is that the judgment on the last scire facias, recovered in 1824 against the defendants, is not binding h’ere, inasmuch as the court in Massachusetts had no jurisdiction over the defendants, living at the time in this state; that though process was served on them in the county of Oxford, and they in person or by attorney attended the court in Massachusetts,still that such attendance gave the court no jurisdiction, as they had none at the time the suit was commenced; and the case of Bissell v. Briggs 9 Mass. 462, is cited as establishing these principles. Waiving for the present, all further inquiry as to the correctness of this argument, it may be of importance to examine the subject in another point of view. By the 6th section of the act of Massachusetts of March l, 1799, in an action on a bond with penalty, judgment, when rendered for the plaintiff is to be rendered for the whole penalty ; and such judgment is to stand as a security for further damages to which the plaintiff may be entitled ; which further damages are to be ascertained on a writ of scire facias on said judgment, from the court where the Same was obtained ; such is the law applicable to all bonds. The act of Massachusetts of March 13, 1806, regulates the proceedings to be had upon sheriff’s bonds for the use of any person or persons who are or may be entitled to the benefit of the same ; but it does not alter the nature of the judgment to be entered in a suit on such bond ; but prescribes the sum for which a creditor shall have execution, after the amount of his claim against a sheriff, his executors or administrators, has been legally ascertained. Thus the law stood at the time “an act relating to the separation of the District, “ of Maine from Massachusetts Proper and forming the same “ into a separate and independent State” was passed, on the 19th. of- June 1819. Several of the provisions of this act are incorporated as a part of our constitution; among which is the -following. “ And the rights and liabilities of all persons shall “ after the said separation, contiune the same, as if the said Dis- “ trict was still a part of this Commonwealth, in all suits pending,