DocketNumber: No. 88
Judges: Lumpkin
Filed Date: 4/15/1855
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
Jeremiah Taylor having been elected Sheriff of Habersham County the first of January, 1852, on the fifth day of Eehruary next ensuing, gave bond for the faithful performance of the duties of his office, with Thos. J. Hughes, P. B. Haralson, James Colly and R. Nash as his securities. The bond was attested and approved by three Justices of the inferior Court.
On the 17th day of April thereafter, being the first sitting of the Superior Court for that county after the election and qualification of Taylor, Judge Jackson examined the bond, as it was made his duty to do, under the law, and passed the following order: “ Examined and approved by Archer Whitehead’s signing as additional security, in presence of the Clerk of the Superior Court.” And this was done, as appears by the official attestation of that officer.
The action against the Sheriff and his securities, for the official misconduct of the Sheriff was brought upon 'this bond;
Tho first question necessarily involves a construction of the Act of 1845 — and in order to do this intelligibly, it becomes necessary to glance briefly at our previous legislation upon the same subject.
The Act of 1799 (Cobb’s Digest 57, 45) declares, “Thatthe Sheriffs of the several counties shall attend the Superior and Inferior Courts in the respective counties when sitting, and by themselves or deputies, execute throughout the counties all writs, warrants, precepts and processes directed to them, .under the authority of any Judge or Justice of the said Superior or Inferior Courts, or the Clerk of either of the Courts; and the said Sheriffs or their deputies shall have power to command all-necessary assistance in the execution of their duty; and to ap point, as there shall be occasion, one or more deputies; and before any Sheriff shall enter upon the duty of his appointment, and being commissioned by the Governor, he shall be bound, for the faithful performance of his duty, by himself and his deputies, before any one of tho said Judges, to the Governor of the State, for the time being, and to his successors in office, jointly and severally, with two good and sufficient securities, inhabitants and free-holders of the county, to be approved of by the Justices of the Inferior Court or any three of them, in the sum of $20,000; and the said bond shall remain in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of such county, and may be sued for by order of said Court, for the satisfaction of the public or persons aggrie vedby the misconduct of the Sheriff or his deputy,” kc.
In 1803, doubts having arisen as to who ivas the proper person authorized and intended by the foregoing act, to take the bonds and obligations of Sheriffs, a declaratory Statute was passed, (a very common sort of legislation in this State) to the effect: “ That any Judge of the Superior or a majority of the-
By a careful perusal of the Act ofv1799 and 1803, it will be seen that the doubts which arose under the former of those Statutes and the remedy provided by the latter for their removal, related exclusively to the question as to w'ho should take Sheriffs’bonds; and the law directed that cither the Judges of the Superior or the Justices of the' Inferior Courts, or a ma-' jority of them, might perform this service. And by scrutinizing the Act of 1799 closely, does it not seem plain that no matter by whom the bond was taken, the security ivas to he approved hy the Justices of the Inferior Court or a majority of them ? To secure its legal execution, the duty of taking it might well have.been confided to the Judges of the Superior Courts. At the same time, it must be admitted, that the Justices of the Inferior Courts of the respective counties are better ■qualified, by their local knowledge, to .judge of the sufficiency of the security.
With this passing remark upon the previous Statutes, we come to the Act of 1845. It- purports to be “ An Act to alter and amend the several Acts then in force in relation to the taking of Sheriff’s bonds,” and declares, that “ From and after its passage, it shall be the duty of the Judges of the Superior Courts of this State, at the first sitting of the Superior Court in any county, after a Sheriff shall have been elected and qualified for such Courts, to examine the official bond of such Sheriff ; and if the bond has not been taken in conformity to the law, it shall be the duty of the Sheriff to give another (?) bond in conformity to the law — which bond the Judge is hereby authorized and impowered to take ; and when so taken, shall be ■entered on the minutes of the Superior Court.” (Cobb’s Digest, 217).
Did the Legislature, by this Act, intend to confer upon the
We cannot resist the conviction, from the phraseology of this Statute as well as its predecessors of 1799 and 1803, that it was designed to delegate to the Judges of the Superior Courts the duty of supervising the formal execution of Sheriff’s bonds, leaving it to the Inferior Courts, as before, to take care of their solvency. The Judges, says the Act, are to examine'the bonds to asoertain^-what? Whether the security is sufficient ? No, but whether they have been taken “in conformity to the lato.” What was the mischief? Not that the public had suffered on account, of the "insolvency of Sheriff’s securities, but that they had escaped, by reason of some technical defect in these instruments. This was the evil intended to be remedied.
We know, however, that a different construction has been put upon this Act in some sections of the State; and contemporaneous construction, when it is general and uniform, should have some influence even in the interpretation of a recent Statute. Perhaps the General Assembly had better settle this difficulty definitely; and thus, save further litigation upon the point.
Respectable authority may be found on both sides of this question. ,The case in Levinz, p. 35, establishes, that after ■ the delivery of a bond a new obligor may be added in this way, without avoiding the instrument as to any previous party. Chief Baron Gilbert in treating on this topic observes, “but if any material part of the contract be altered, aftor sealing and deliv- < r\ —us if A, with a blank left after his name, be bound to B, ;nd .-mor, 0 is added as a joint obligor, this does not avoid the bond ; for ho was bound to pay the whole money, without such
But in O’Neale vs. Long, (4 Cranch, 59,) the Supreme Court of the United States held, that if a bond is executed by O, as security for S, to obtain an appeal from the judgment of a Justice of the Peace, and the bond is rejected by the Justice; and afterwards, and without the knowledge of 0, the name of W be interlined as an obligor, who executes the bond, and the Justice then accepts it, it is void as to O.
Mr. P. B. Key contended, in the first place, that the deed was void by the alteration in a matter essential; thereby ma king it the deed of four when it was only the deed of three persons; and that it was immaterial whether the alteration was for the benefit of the obligor or not, the only question in all .such cases being, whether the deed be substantially varied. He insisted, secondly, upon the authority of Whelpdale’s case, (5 Coke, 19 b,) that after the rejection of the bond by the Justice, it could not be again set up without a new delivery; that the Justice was substituted, by the law, for the obligee, and that his rejection is equally fatal as if the bond had been tendered to and refused by the obligee himself: (Shep. Touchstone, 70.)
Mr. Mason, on the contrary, argued that the alteration did not vary the deed, as it was obviously for the benefit of the defendant ; that it was not the less the deed of the defendant because it became the deed of another; that it was in the nature •of a judicial proceeding and not a mere matter of contract between man and man. It is a security required by law in a civil action.
Chief J. Marshall, who delivered the opinion of the Court, ■.stated, “that the Judges did not agree upon the same ground, ■some being of the opinion that the bond was void by reason of
Two cases more perfectly parallel could not well be imagined.
To the admission of this paper in evidence defendants objected, on the ground that these various cases in favor of different plaintiffs and against different defendants, could not be included in the same rule. The Court over-ruled the objection and allowed the testimony to go to the Jury; and thereupon, defendants, by their Counsel, excepted.
The only authority read and relied upon in support of this exception is, the case of Patterson et al. vs. The Officers of the Circuit Court of Mobile, (11 Ala. R. 740.) The first head note is, that several plaintiffs having distinct interests, cannot unite in a motion against the Sheriff.
Without stopping to inquire whether or not the opinion of the Court justified this marginal proposition, we have only to say, that a contrary practice, founded in convenience, and attended with no practical evils, has obtained in all the Courts of all the Circuits in this State, time immemorially. And that wre see no sufficient reason for departing from it at this late day. Any number of parties unite in a creditor’s bill. And a money motion has always been analogized to a proceeding in Equity.
The same objection was taken to the rule absolute as that
We deem it unnecessary to repeat what we have already said upon this point.
After a careful re-consideration of the rule adopted hv this Court upon this subject, wo are disposed to adhere to it, although it is somewhat difficult to perceive upon what principle it rests. One thought is suggested by this record — there are two'breaches assigned in the suit upon the bond — one, the failure or refusal of the Sheriff to obey the rule absolute ordering ■ him to pay over the money; and the other, the neglect of the-Sheriff to sell the property levied on according to law. Is not his disobedience to the rule absolute such “ official misconduct” as constitutes a breach of the bond ? And is not the judgment against him conclusive against the securities and every body else, of that fact ? As to the quantum of damages assessable under this assignment, that is quite a different thing.
Mr. Justice Johnson, late of the Supreme Court Bench of the United States, said in one of his opinions, that Lord Coke “seldom let an opportunity escape him that furnished an apology for exemplifying his indefatigable research, and to make each case he reported authority for a score of positive decisions and the introduction to a mass of law upon questions totally distinct. And that his Reports, like the Text of Little-ton, are only to be considered as the occasion or excuse for displaying his acquirements in the law learning of his day, and expressing his opinions upon judicial topics.”
If Reports, which have gone through some twenty English
Judge Jackson, under the decision of this Court in Crawford, Gov. &c. vs. Wood, Wofford et al. (7 Ga. R. 445,) charged the Jury, that the measure of damages was the amount of the plaintiff’s debt, with interest and cost, and 20 per cent, damages, from the date of the rule absolute.
The facts in the case are these : On the 26th of October, 1852, a fi. fa. at the instance of A. W. & W. P. Carmichael, the defendants in error, against Peter B. Haralson of Haber-sham and John I). Field of Lumpkin County, for the sum of $186-^, including interest and cost, was issued and delivered to Jeremiah Taylor the Sheriff of Habersham County; that on the 25th of February, 1853, Taylor levied upon lands of Haralson in Habersham County; that at the adjourned term of the Superior Court, held on the 13th day of May, 1853, the property being unsold and no return of nulla bona made as to either of the defendants, a rule absolute was obtained against the Sheriff ordering him to pay ovei', instanter, the money due upon the plaintiff’s j6. fa.; that on the 4th of October, 1853, Taylor returned on the fi. fa. that he had sold the land for $210, and that he,had distributed the money to the plaintiff’s execution and eleven others against the defendants, still making no return of no further property to be levied. And thereupon, on the 24th of February, 1854, the plaintiffs brought
The defendants proved that the proceeds of the property levied on had been distributed to the various fi. fas. according to their respective liens; that all of Haralson’s property had- been-sold except a¡ cow or two supposed to be running at large in the mountains and a few hogs in the woods, not amounting to more property than is allowed under the Exempting Law, in favor of poor debtors ; that in the fall of 1852 defendant had a store at Mount Yonah, containing a stock of goods worth, perhaps, several hundred dollars; that the stock was reduced -to a mere remn'ant by the latter part of the winter; that the property-levied on was rising in value from February, 1858, when, it-was levied on, to October of' that year, when it was sold. These facts were substantially testified to by all the witnesses..
We are compelled to admit that it is competent for the Sheriff, in a case like this, to prove, in mitigation of damages, any facts showing that the plaintiffs have suffered nothing or but little by his default or breach of duty. (7 M. &. W. 463, 473. 4 Id. 145. 10 Mass. R. 470. 1 N. H. 82. 2 Mass. 526. 2 Bay, 395. 2 Bing. 317. 1 Johns. R. 215. 7 Id. 189. 11 Mass. R. 89. Id. 188. 2 Greenlf. 46. 45 En. Com. Law R. 577. 28 Id. 383. 1 M. & W. 713. 2 Cr. & M. 413. 10 A. & E. 719. 2 Eng. Law & Eq. 260. 73 En. C. L. R. 371. 24 Maine, 183. 5 N. H. 433. 2 Mass. R. 374. 10 Id. 479. 6 Pick. R. 468. 9 Metcalf, 564. 9 Conn. R. 380. 16 Id. 555. 1 Hill’s N. Y. R. 8. 4 Sandf. N. Y. R. 67. 8 Watts, 153. 5 Watts & Serg. 455. 2 Gill. 62. 9 Leigh. 397. 1 Hawks, 425. 1 Iredell, 318. Harper’s Law R. 73. 1 Bailey, 646. 4 Littell, 152. 4 J. J. Marshall, 202. 3 McLean’s C. C. R. 97. 4 McCord, 84. 16 Ohio, 539. 6 Ga. R. 244. Sedg. on the Measure of Damages, 506.)
Indeed, I am • satisfied that the rule, that the whole sum must be given, is never applied to an action of debt upon the-Sheriff’s bond; and that it is only in debt for an-escape on execution, under the English Statutes, that the measure; of