52 Me. 271 | Me. | 1863
The opinion of the Court was drawn by
This is an action of debt for the penalty of a bond, given by the defendant, for the maintenance of the plaintiff and her late husband, during their lives. At the time the bond was given, the husband gave to the defendant a deed of his farm.
The evidence in regard to the insanity of the husband was immaterial; and the jury were properly instructed to disregard it. The plaintiff affirms the validity of the deed, by her suit upon the bond.
The defendant prayed oyer of the bond, and pleaded nil debit, with a brief statement of performance of the conditions. The jury were instructed that the burden of proving performance was upon the defendant. If the bond had been for the performance of an agreement, and the plaintiff had assigned specific breaches thereof, the rule might, perhaps, have been different. Postmaster General v. Cochran,
The ruling that the plaintiff must show how much she ought to recover, whether correct or not, was in favor of the defendant; and he cannot complain. Such seems to have been held to be the rule in a hearing upon a motion to chancer the penalty in a bond. Gowen v. Nowell, 2 Greenl., 13. As this is not a case in which the plaintiff claimed judgment for the penal sum, it is unnecessary for us to express any opinion upon the question.
The jury were instructed to assess all the damages that had accrued up to the time of the trial. This rule would have been correct in a suit upon a bond for the performance of covenants or agreements, in which the damages must have been assessed by the jury. Is the case at bar one of this kind?
Two classes of bonds have always been recognized by courts of law, as well as of equity. But, in suits at common law upon bonds of either kind, before any provisions of statute were made, the jury determined nothing but the issues presented by the pleadings ; and, if in any case, their verdict was in favor of the plaintiff, he was entitled to judgment for the penal sum, unless the amount should be reduced by the Court, upon a hearing in chancery. 1 Tidd’s Pr., 509, 584, 879; Hardy v. Bern, 5 D. & E., 636.
In this country, in order to relieve the obligors from the rigorous rule of the common law, it seems to have been the practice in some of the States, for the Court to determine the amount of damages justly due, upon a hearing of the parties in the suit upon the bond, after default or verdict, without any process in equity therefor. When, or how this practice originated, it may not be easy to determine. The Provincial Act of 5 W. & M., c. 5, (1692,) recognized it as existing. By it the powers of common law courts were enlarged, and new courts were established, the highest of
Originally, the proceedings appear to have been substantially the same in all suits upon bonds, of whatever kind. But, as before stated, there were two kinds of bonds; (1,) those made to secure the performance of "covenants or agreements;” and (2,) those which were to be void upon the performance of the conditions therein named, which the obligors were not otherwise bound to perform. In England, while the liabilities of the parties upon bonds of the latter kind remained unchanged, the Act of 8 & 9 W. 3, c. 11, § 8, provided "that in all actions upon any bond or bonds, or on any penal sum, for the non-performance of any covenants or agreements,” the plaintiff might suggest or allege as many breaches of the covenants or agreements as he thpught fit, and the jury should assess the damages sustained at that time. Thereupon judgment was to be entered for the penal sum, and execution was to be issued for the amount of damages assessed by the jury. Drage v. Brand, 2 Wilson, 377; Murray v. Earl of Stair, 2 B. & C., 82.
This statute was never adopted in New England. Mooney
But no such provisions were ever made applicable to suits upon bonds with merely a condition of defeasance. As before stated, in suits upon such bonds, it appears to have been the common law of New England, recognized in the early statutes, that the Court, without any process in equity therefor, should assess the damages justly due', not exceeding the penal sum and interest, and render judgment and issue execution therefor. In England, whenever damages are to- be determined by the Court, in suits at common law, it is done personally or by an auditor, prothonotary, or master, upon whose report of the facts, unless invalidated, the amount is fixed, and judgment rendered. Tidd’s Practice, 569-573 ; 10 Petersdorff, 631; 2 Saund., 106, note. In this State the practice has generally been for the parties to be heard in open Court, by the justice presiding.
The power of the Court to determine the damages in suits upon such bonds, was affirmed by the laws of 1821, c. 50, § 2, as we have previously stated. This section was repealed in 1841. But the statutes, as then revised, empowered this Court, "as a Court of equity, to hear and determine all cases of forfeitures in all civil obligations and contracts.”
The defendant did not claim to have the damages assessed by'the Court, instead of the jury. He does not claim a new trial because they were not so assessed. But he does claim a new trial because the jury were instructed to assess the damages sustained to the time of the trial.
At common law, in suits upon bonds for the performance of agreements, if the party could have another action for subsequent breaches, the Court assessed only such damages as had accrued at the date of the writ. Hambleton v. Verre, 2 Saund., 169, note. But, under the Act of 8 and 9, W. 3, and similar statutes in this country, it has been held, that the provision that the jury should assess the damages "sustained at the time,” authorized the jury to assess the damages to the time of the trial. Waldo v. Forbes, 1 Mass., 10; Gardiner v. Niles, 16 Maine, 279; Gennings v. Norton, 35 Maine, 308; Whitney v. Slayton, 40 Maine, 224.
But, if the bond is not one for the performance of an
The bond in the case at bar, is not one " for the performance of covenants or agreements.” It is simply a bond with a condition of defeasance. It is not claimed that there was any covenant or agreement other than the bond itself. As was said by Shepley, J., in Hathaway v. Crosby, 17 Maine, 448, "the obligor does not stipulate in the conditions to pay any sum of money, nor to perform any act. He only secures to himself an option to avoid the bond by the performance of certain acts. The. obligees could not exact performance. They could only claim the penalty, by an action of debt, in case of neglect to perform.”
If the damages had been assessed by the Court, they would have been prospective, for the maintenance of the plaintiff during her life, and not merely to the time of the trial. And, though neither party objected to the assessment of damages by the jury,-the same rule should have been given to them by the instructions. Such would not have been the rule in an action upon a covenant for maintenance. Powers v. Ware, 4 Pick., 106. In such case the plaintiff would have further remedy for future maintenance. But in this case, there being no agreement, and no condi
The defendant pleaded nil debit, instead of non est factum; and the plaintiff joined the issue tendered upon it. The verdict was according to the issue. It is now too late for either party to take any advantage of the irregularity. 2 Starkie, 463; Garland v. Davis, 4 How. U. S., 131; Jansen v. Ostrander, 1 Cowen, 670.
The exceptions and motion are overruled. And judgment will be rendered and execution issued for the amount awarded by the jury.