46 Md. 235 | Md. | 1877
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The judgment on which the attachment’ in this case was issued, was recovered at November term, 1866, against Charles Ridgely, Jr., and George W. Wilson and Fielder Suit, two of his sureties, on a tax-collector’s bond ; Zadok Sasscer, the other security thereon, having died before the institution of the suit. It appears that the judgment was satisfied by the payment of the whole amount due thereon by George W. Wilson and the administrators of Zadok
It was contended by the counsel of the appellees, that .the attachment was properly quashed, because the record does not disclose whether the judgment against the principal and sureties in the collector’s bond, was ever properly entered, and because no breaches in the condition of the bond were ever assigned. Upon the return of the summons in that case, the defendants appeared by attorney and no pleas were filed, and it must be presumed that the judgment was entered by the consent of their attorney.
In suits upon collector’s bonds, no assignment of the breaches of the bond is necessary, as Article 81, section 82, of the Code provides that, in reply to a plea of performance, the State may reply that the obligor or obligors hath or have not performed the condition of his or their bond, and give the special matter in evidence, and that it shall not be necessary to set out the breaches. The judgment was entered for the penalty of the bond, “tobe released on payment of the amount of the Comptroller’s certificate,
At common law, a surety in a bond, upon which judgment had been recovered, had no right, upon paying the amount of the judgment, to have it assigned to him, so as to enable him to have execution against his principal or co-sureties.
To give him a more speedy and efficient remedy than the common law provided, the Act of 1763, chap. 23, sec. 8, was passed, which authorized an assignment of a judgment by the creditor to a surety in the bond, and an execution thereon in the name of the surety who had paid and satisfied the judgment. But it was held, under the provisions of this Act, that when the State had recovered a judgment upon bond with surety there could be no assignment to the surety satisfying the judgment, for the reason that there was no person authorized by law to make the assignment. So the law remained until the Act of 1864, chap. 243, amended Article 9 of the Code, by providing an additional section to come in after section seven, and which enacted, that “in any case where judgment
It was also objected, that an attachment will not be maintained which has been levied upon funds which a person has in his hands as a public officer, and it is claimed that the attachment in this case was properly quashed for this reason. This principle was held by this Court in the case of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, Garnishee of Brashears vs. Root, 8 Md., 100 and 101. In that case Root caused an attachment to be laid upon funds in the hands of the City Register, which he held as salary of Brashears, a policeman, and while the question in that case was, whether the salary of a municipal officer was liable to attachment, it clearly appears from the opinion of the Court, that no attachment laid in the hands of a public or municipal officer would be maintained, for it quotes with apparent approval from the opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Sargent, in the case of Balkly vs. Eckert, et al., 3 Barr’s Reps., 368, in which he says, that “ great public inconvenience would arise if money could be thus arrested in the hands of officers, and they be made liable to all the delay, embarrassment and trouble that would ensue from being estopped in the routine of their business, compelled to appear in Court, employ counsel and answer interrogatories, as well as take care that the proceedings are regularly carried on. If a precedent of this kind were set, there seems no reason why the State or county treasurer or other fiscal officers of the Commonwealth, or of municipal bodies, may not be subjected to the levying of attachments, which has never
It follows from what we have said that the attachment was properly quashed, and the judgment appealed from will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.