Judges: Buckner
Filed Date: 12/21/1830
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
delivered the ¿pinion of the court.
* Chrístofher K. Durbin, administrator of Christopher Durbin, deceased, instituted an action of covenant against E. and H. Brown, executors of Joshua Brown, deceased, on seven different covenants; each bearing date on the 17th of February, 1812; and were payable, annually. The following is a copy of the note first due; and five others, except as to the time of payments, are-literal transcripts of it. The seventh is, for a less amount, "but payable iirlike manner, in property.
“For value received, wejpromise to pay Christopher Durbin ten pounds, to be discharged as follows: ten 'dollars in tea, five in wheat, and five hundred weight of pork, and the balance in corn, to be paid by the ,25th of December, 1815. Given under my hand this' 17th of February, 1812. SAMUEL DURBIN,
JOSHUA BROWN.”
The , defendants in the court below filed several pleas.
1st. Denying that they were executors of Joshua Brown deceased.
2d. Denying that the writings sued on, were-the acts and deeds of said J. Brown.
3d. Denying that the plaintiff was the administrator of C. "Durbin, deceased.
4th. That the covenants in the declaration set forth, were performed by the obligors therein. Upon pleas 1, 2, and 3, issues were joined. For replication to 4th •.plea, the plaintiff pleaded, that the defendants had not paid tile debt in the declaration maintained, upon which issue .was joined. A verdict was found for the plaintiff in the action,in the following words:
“We of the jury, find for the plaintiff two hundred and eleven dollars and fifty cents in damages; we also find that the defendants have intermeddled with and Used the estate, by keeping and applying to their use-
A motion for a new trial was overruled, and Brown’s executors prosecute this writ of error- with .supersedeas. The errors assigned- arc,
1st. That the court had not jurisdiction of the matters in controversy, and improperly overruled a demurrer to the declaration.
2d. That the verdict is defective, in not responding to the issues, and'did not warrant the judgment; the executors being liable only (if liable at all) for the value of the assets or properly used by them.
3d That the court erred in the various opinions given, as stated in bills of exceptions, and in overruling the motion for a new trial.
The first error assigned, as it relates to - the ser, is founded in a mistake, as to the true history the proceedings in the case. A demurrer was filed to the declaration and sustained; and the defendant there, obtained the permission of the court, and amended the declaration. But we-are of opinion, that there could be no well founded objection to the jurisdiction of the-court. The covenants, upon which the suit was founded, were,-for the payment of property. Actions of debt could not have been maintained upon them; had they even been for amounts over $50; see the case of Noe et al. vs. Preston; V J. J. Marshall, 57; and that of Campbell vs. Weister, I Litt. 31, where it is decided that debt cannot be maintained upon a note for the payment of a certain sum, containing the following expressions:
“The above sum-will be-received in .any good current bank paper.” The fifth section of the act of 1813, II Dig. L. K. 701, giving to justices of the peace, exclusive original-jurisdiction of all sums not exceeding $50, founded ón any specialty, bill or note in writing, or account, does not aid the objection; for it lias been decided, that the words “all sums” used in that section, should be construed to mean sums of money only. Farrow vs. Summers, III Litt. 460.,
’ The same doctrine was applicable to a rightful executor, for if an issue upon the pica of “we unques ex~ ecutor” was found against him, the judgment was de bonis testatoris si, &c. si non, de bonis-propriis. But the law upon this subject, has been altered by the statute
To the plea that the covenants were performed by the obligors, the replication was too obviously defective to require comment to prove it. The issue formed upon it was immaterial. A motion in arrest of the judgment if made, would have been sustainable; but although no attempt was made in that way, we are of opinion, that the circuit court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial; because, upon that plea, no issue was formed, upon which the merits of the defence could have been properly tried.
Upon the return of the case to the court below, objections which were made to the competency of certain witesses' may, and probably will be again presented for the decision of that court, and we have therefore considered it, as necessary now to notice them.
The plaintiffs in error, introduced as a witness in support of theirpleas, Hannah Durbin, widow of Samuel Durbin, who was one of the obligors in the covenants sued upon. An objection to her, as an incompetent witness on account of her alleged interest was made, and sustained by the court. Samuel Durbin, her deceased husband, was the son of Christopher Durbin, deceased, (the obligee) and the other witnesses
If so, she was interested, as entitled to a distributable share of the estate of Brown, who it seems, died intestate; because her share of it might be diminished py a judgment against the plaintills in error. See the case °f Denny vs Booker, II Bibb, 427. To remove this objection, the plaintiffs in error procured from-her a release. But whether that instrument rendered her competent, it is unnecessary to determine, as we are of opinion, that she was properly excluded upon another ground. Brown wfts the surety of Samuel' Durbin, in the covenants sued upon, and if the plaintiffs in error, as the executors of Brown, be cast in the suit, and compelled to discharge such judgment as maybe recovered, the estate of Samuel Durbin, (to a portion of which, his widow is entitled) will be answerable to Brown’s representatives; Under this view of the subject, the plaintiffs in- error executed to her a writing, purporting to release her and the administrators and heirs of Samuel Durbin, deceased, from all responsibility to them on account of any money, which they, as executors of Brown, might be compelled to pay on any judgment which might be recovered against them, in the suit depending. If executors de son tort can execute a valid release, exonerating persons from responsibilities to the estate, with which they have in-termeddled, without authority, which is not admitted,, still the reléase under consideration would not have the desired efficacy. Hannah Durbin does not appear to have been the administratrix of S. Durbin, deceased,- and a release to her could not be successfully relied on-by the person, who may have administered upon his estateina suit, in the name of a rightful executor or administrator of Brown, to recover money, made out of Brown’s estate to discharge a debt created by Sam act Durbin, and for the payment of which, Brown was-his surety only. The fact that the release purported to be made to the administrator of S. Durbin, cannot make any difference, because if the plaintiffs in error could, as executors de son tort, make such a release, it does not appear that any person had administered on the estate of S. Durbin. Besides, if upon an issue formed upon the plea of covenants performed by the
"Whether the objection by the plaintiffs in error, to the competency of Joseph Durbin, was properly •overruled, depends upon a fact which the record does ■not satisfactorily show. He was also the son of Christopher Durbin, deceased, and might as such be entitled to a portion of the money sued for; but it satisfactorily appears, that he had transferred in writing, his entire interest in the covenants, to his mother, who had died sometime previous to the trial of this suit; and from the bill of exceptions, it appears that his mother had transferred her interest, in writing, to two persons, children of Joseph, the witness; but that writing is not incorporateo in the record. If the writing vests in the children, the interest of their grandmother, then Joseph Durbin had no interest in the event oí the suit, and was consequently a competent witness.
The judgment of the circuit court must be reversed and the cause remanded to that court, with directions for further proceedings to be had, not inconsistent with this opinion.