48 Me. 140 | Me. | 1858
The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
On August 1, 1829, the plaintiff in the suit first above named, with Eleazar Wyer and Joseph M. Gerrish, (the two last named having since deceased,) as partners in trade, under the firm of Wyer, Noble & Co., brought their suit against the present defendants, returnable to the late Court of Common Pleas for the county of Cumberland, begun and holden on the first Tuesday of October, A. D., 1829, and in the same suit, the Cumberland and Oxford Canal Corporation was alleged to be the trustee of the principal defendants, and service of the writ in that suit, having been duly made on all the parties defendant therein, the same was entered in Court, and the principal defendants were defaulted at said term. The trustee disclosed, and was adjudged to be trustee; whereupon an appeal was taken from that adjudication to the Supreme Judicial Court, begun and holden in the county of Cumberland, on the first Tuesday of Nov. 1829, and the appeal was entered in the Court last mentioned, and continued therein from term to term, until the term begun and holden on the first Tuesday of May, A. D., 1831, at which term, the said corporation was adjudged trustee; and judgment was rendered against the principal defendants
The clerk of said corporation, C. E. Barrett, testified, that on the day of the service of the trustee writ, which was Aug. 1, 1829, the corporation was able to pay the claim of the plaintiffs in that action, and a part of the sum due from the trustee was paid to the principal defendants, and a balance reserved sufficient to satisfy the judgment which might be recovered in said trustee suit, and the amount so reserved, has never been paid to any one; that on the day of service, the corporation was in funds and for three or four months afterwards; and, that the trustee writ alone prevented the payment to the principal defendants of the amount due from the corporation.
The judgment so obtained, remaining unsatisfied, an action of debt was brought thereon, in the year 1837, against the debtors in the judgment, and the same year judgment was rendered in that suit for the amount of the former judgment, including interest and-costs. And, upon the judgment last named, being in no part satisfied, this suit was instituted. The defence is upon the ground, that the original plaintiffs having omitted to sue out a process of scire facias, against the corporation for the space of twenty years from the time the first judgment was rendered, and the corporation having
The implication from the fact, that the corporation was in funds at the time of the service of the trustee process upon it, and so continued for three or four months afterwards, is, that it ceased to be so, subsequently. No evidence is offered and no suggestion made, that a process of scire facias against the corporation, instituted at the earliest time that it could be brought, would have been of the least avail. If the judgment, that the corporation was trustee on the disclosure made, was suffered to remain without any effort by scire facias to obtain payment, that could not operate as a discharge of that judgment. And the defence is inconsistent with a proposition, that the judgment is presumed to be paid.
The trustee suit was properly commenced; and while it was pending, the corporation ceased to have funds, and for this the plaintiffs in the trustee process were in no wise accountable, notwithstanding it prevented the payment by the corporation to the defendants in that suit. But, if it were otherwise, this defence was waived by them, in suffering judgment to be rendered in the action of debt, commenced in the year 1837, when all the facts now relied upon, were then in existence.
It is insisted by the defendants, that one third part of the judgment against them has been paid to Gerrish, one of the original plaintiffs. It is true, that Gerrish assigned his portion of the judgment to Daniel Green, who paid him therefor. This was not between Gerrish and either of the debtors, and the judgment against the latter was in no part satisfied.
Default to stand.
The other suit is a cross-action, so that a judgment, if obtained thereon, can be set off against the judgment sought to be recovered in the action first named, if the defence thereto should fail. The suit in favor of Merrill & al., is as
As the statute touching foreign attachment was, while the trustee action was pending, the trustee by that judgment was protected against the claim of the principal defendants, provided such claim did not exceed the amount of the judgment. Matthews v. Houghton, 11 Maine, 377; Norris v. Hall, 18 Maine, 332. Hence, the defendants were precluded from enforcing their demand against the corporation, so long as that judgment was in force. But, it is insisted by the plaintiffs in the present’ suit, that, after the lapse of twenty years from the rendition of that judgment, it ceases to be a bar to a suit against the trustee, in favor of the plaintiffs, and the claim, which is the foundation of this action, is not barred by the statute of limitations, and cannot be so barred till six years shall have elapsed from the time such cause of action accrued.
The above view is not sustained by law. The judgment is a bar to the plaintiffs’ claim, so long as it stands in force. The lapse of twenty years raises the presumption that it has been discharged. This presumption, however, may be rebutted by proof. But, if the presumption is not dislodged by proof, it affects equally the principal defendant and the trustee in the trustee suit. But the ground taken by the plaintiffs, to sustain this action, is, that this judgment has not been paid or discharged, and so the presumption is overcome. If this is true, and we cannot doubt that it is, the trustee might invoke the judgment in bar, if a suit should be instituted by the plaintiffs in this action.
It is in proof, that the trustee suit was so long pending in Court, that the means of payment by the corporation had ceased before the judgment. This could not be attributed to the fault of either party. The process of foreign attachment was legally open to this defendant and his partners. The plaintiffs cannot, therefore, complain, that it defeated any attempt on their part to obtain payment. The attachment failed, as direct attachments sometimes fail, pending the suit.
Plaintiffs nonsuit.