10 Ohio St. 445 | Ohio | 1841
The question presented for consideration is, are the sureties liable when the bond has not been signed or sealed by the principal obligor? The principal is dead, so that no objection is made to the form of the action; although the bond is joint and several, the defense is, that-the instrument is not a valid one.
In 5 Com. Dig. 148, tit. Officer, it is laid down, “ that no bond or writing may be exacted from the subject to the king or other person, to do that which by law'he was bound to do to the king, and such bond will be void, and the defendant may plead duress.’ And this rigorous principle has been the foundation of all the reasoning which has been employed to show that bonds given by public officers, which are not in conformity.with the provisions of tbo law, are void. At that early day the distinction does not seem to have been well established between statutory bonds and bonds which the party voluntarily consented to execute. This has been left to the more liberal spirit of modern times, which, acting upon society in all its various ramifications, has introduced itself into the structure of all our laws, and into the mode in which justice is administered. The distinction can not be called a merely curious and artificial one, since it has the same root and foundation *wbich the laws themselves have. It may [M'8 more truly bo called an enlightened distinction, since at the same time that it stands upon certain fixed principles, it endeavors to do violence to the rights of no one, by ascertaining in the most sensible manner the real intention of the parties to a contract.
It may be laid down as a general fact, that in the earlier stages of jurisprudence, its principles and the forms in which they are announced, are the most narrow and restricted possible, and that in its further progress, and when it has arrived at maturity, the rules which it adopts are combined with a greater degree of good sense. This results from the nature of the human mind, which, in the absence of a long and extensive experience, is obliged to take shelter under a sot of maxims which' are the most general and technical, and the least flexible in their application. Thus, notwithstanding the rigorous rule which I have referred to in Comyn, it is impossible not to know that a vast body of author
In the case of the Postmaster General v. Early, 12 Wheat. 136, the suit was upon a bond given to the postmaster-general by the defendant, his deputy. The defendants pleaded and proved that their contract was not one authorized by any law of the United States. The bond, however, was sustained upon the soundest principles of reasoning. And yet the doctrine of Comyn is, that it is absolutely unlawful to take such a bond. The passage which I have cited from that author is also supported by Lord Coke in his 3 Inst. 149, with the exception of the last words, “ and the defendant may plead duress.” The true inquiry, undoubtedly, in all these cases is, has duress been practiced in obtaining the'bond? If it has, the bond should be annulled; but if it has not, if the contract has been voluntarily entered into, every principle of reason and of justice declares that it should be sustained. This is the doctrine which the courts may be considered as having fairly settled down upon as the most likely to secure the rights of the parties and to prevent fraud. Comyn says that the def'end-
Great reliance is placed upon the fact, that if the instrument 451] *is not executed by the principal it will affect the remedy over against him by the securities. There would be great force in this argument if the remedy were destroyed; but it is not; the force and the extent of this liability to them are unimpaired. Whether they could use the bond, per se, as evidence of his liability, presents a question merely of convenience in the use of the right, but does not affect the right itself any more than would the loss or destruction of the bond. And a further answer to this argument is, that the bond being found in the hands of the legal depositary, the auditor, the presumption in the absence of any testimony to contx’adict it, is very strong that the sureties dispensed with, or which, as to its legal effect, is the same thing, that they were careless about the fact whether it was signed by the principal or not.
There is one case which has been recently decided by the Supremo Ooux't of the United States, which I can not refrain from noticing. It is the United States v. Linxx and others, 15 Pet. 290. The instrument on which the suit was brought, was a writing not sealed by either the principal or his sureties, and it was held that, although it was not a bond, it was a good contract between the parties. It is contended by the counsel for the defendant, that in that case the act under which the suit was brought, does not require bond, but merely that security shall be given. But an examination shows that he is mistaken. The act under which the instrument was taken (3 Story’s Stat. 1780) directs that the receiver shall give secuxdty in the same manner as was provided by the general act in force; and this act (1 Story’s Stat. 786) expressly directed that receivers should give bond with approved security. The term security applies to the sureties, and not to the nature of the instrument, which is absolutely required to be under seal; and yet the court held that this writing having been
I shall go into no further examination of the cases. There are a number of others which might be referred to in support of the conclusion to which we have arrived, that this is not an imperfect bond, that it is a good statutory bond, and that if it were not, it would be a good bond at common law.