DocketNumber: No. 35115.
Citation Numbers: 10 So. 2d 841, 194 Miss. 91, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 165
Judges: Roberds, Smith
Filed Date: 12/14/1942
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
Appellee, Rosa Adams, as administratrix of the estate of Eddie Adams, deceased, seeks, as complainant in this bill, to recover of defendants, Holyfield and the United States Fidelity Guaranty Company, a nonresident corporation, surety on Holyfield's bond, as sheriff of Rankin County, Mississippi, damages for the death of Eddie Adams caused, it is alleged, by a wrongful and tortious act of said Holyfield committed as such sheriff in Rankin County.
The bill was filed in Pike County and joined as garnishee-defendants certain residents of that county, who were engaged in the insurance business therein, the bill averring that said resident defendants were indebted to, or had in their possession property or effects of, said nonresident surety.
The resident defendants, by answers, denied indebtedness to, and possession of property or effects of, said surety, accompanying their answers with motions to quash and dismiss the attachment on that ground. Testimony was taken upon this preliminary factual issue. No point is made on that procedure. The chancellor overruled the motions. That holding is assigned here as error. Without detailing the evidence, we think, in the present state of the record-proof and in view of Section 5228, Mississippi Code of 1930, the finding of the chancellor was correct.
Holyfield and his bondsman and two other defendants, residents of Rankin County, made a motion to change the venue of this suit to Rankin County, on the ground that Holyfield is the principal defendant, and that he is a householder and a resident citizen and the sheriff of *Page 96 Rankin County, in which county the wrong, if there be a wrong, was committed. The chancellor denied the motion.
Section 363, said Code, defining the venue of suits in chancery, after specifying the venue under particular conditions, none of which cover the situation here, says "and all cases not otherwise provided may be brought in the chancery court of any county where the defendant, or any necessary party defendant, may reside or be found."
Chapter 248, General Laws of Mississippi 1940, page 417, provides: "Venue of actions, what county generally — actions against public officer to be brought in county of his residence. . . . If a citizen resident in this state shall be sued in any action, not local, out of the county of his household and residence, or if a public officer be sued in any such action, out of the county of his household and residence, although a surety or sureties, or some of the sureties, on his bond, or other joint defendant, sued with him, be found or be subject to action in such county, the venue shall be changed, on his application, . . . to the county of his household and residence." This Act amended Section 495, Code of 1930, which is in Chapter 12 under the heading "circuit courts." However, Section 474 of said Code, under the same heading, provides: "All things contained in this chapter, not restricted by their nature or by express provision to particular courts, shall be the rules of decision and proceeding in all courts whatsoever."
In Palmetto Fire Ins. Co. v. Allen,
We think this case is not restricted by its nature to law courts and that it is taken from under Section 363 by Chapter 248, supra, and that said chapter is applicable to this proceeding. Reason supports this conclusion. The office of sheriff and the proper performance of his duties are very important to the public welfare. If he could be sued in any county where some one may owe, or have property of his bondsman, then he could be forced to any and all parts of the state defending litigation, with or without merit, and be greatly hampered in the discharge of his official duties. State ex rel. Weems v. United States Fidelity Guaranty Co.,
The contention is also made by demurrer, overruled by the lower court, that this attachment will not lie because the bonding company is not a debtor of the complainant as is required by Section 173, Code of 1930, as a foundation of the right of attachment against a nonresident; that if anyone is indebted, or liable, to complainant, it is Holyfield; that his liability must be first determined and fixed by a decree or judgment before there is a debt or liability against his surety. That might be correct, depending on the provisions of the bond, (Travelers' Ins. Co. v. Inman,
"The remedy upon sheriff's bond shall be joint and several against all or any one or more of the obligors; but in all suits thereon against the surety or sureties, the liability of the sheriff shall be first fixed, except when the sheriff is a party to the suit, has died or removed or is not found."
In the Weems case, supra, we held that this separate classification of actions on sheriffs' bonds had a reasonable basis therefor, and that this section is constitutional and valid. It was also said in that case, as bearing on the point under consideration, ". . . that where the sheriff is a party to the action, with the surety, it shall not be necessary that his liability be first fixed." [
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and order entered here accordingly.
Thomas v. B. Rosenberg & Sons, Inc. , 153 Miss. 314 ( 1929 )
Travelers' Ins. Co. v. Inman , 157 Miss. 810 ( 1930 )
Shackelford v. New York Underwriters Ins. , 189 Miss. 396 ( 1940 )
State Ex Rel. Weems v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. , 157 Miss. 740 ( 1930 )
Huff v. Murray , 171 Miss. 656 ( 1935 )
Redpath Chautauquas, Inc. v. Carrell , 100 Fla. 168 ( 1930 )