Abner L. Duncan's Heirs & Representatives v. United States

32 U.S. 435, 8 L. Ed. 739, 7 Pet. 435, 1833 U.S. LEXIS 356
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 30, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 32 U.S. 435 (Abner L. Duncan's Heirs & Representatives v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abner L. Duncan's Heirs & Representatives v. United States, 32 U.S. 435, 8 L. Ed. 739, 7 Pet. 435, 1833 U.S. LEXIS 356 (1833).

Opinion

Mr Justice M’Lean

delivered the opinion of-the Court.

This writ of error is, prosecuted to reverse a judgment of-the district court, which exercises circuit-court powers, in the. state of Louisiana.

In the year 1829 an action was commenced by the United States against the plaintiffs in error,, on a bond given by William Carson, as paymaster, and signed by A. L. Duncan and John Carson as his sureties. The bond bears date the 4th day of Marcn 1807, and contains a condition “that, if the above bounded William Carson, paymaster for the United States of America, do and shall well and truly, according to law, perform *446 and discharge the duties.of said office of paymaster, &c. within the district of. Orleans, then the obligation to be'void,” &c.

The breach alleged in the petition was, that William Carson, paymaster, &c., has not well an,d truly, according to law, discharged and performed the duties of said office for the district of Orleans; but that, on the contrary, he did, in his life time, receive large sums ofmoneyinhis capacity aforesaid, which, although frequently requesfed,-he refused to pay into the treasury of the United States.”

Tire defendants in their answér say, that “ by, and in said bond, it was stipulated and understood, when the same was signed by Abner L. Duncan, as security for said Carson, that one Thomas Duncan should also sign the same, as his co-surety, but that the said Thomas Duncan never did sign the same, and said bond never was completed, nor was said A. L. Duncan ever bound thereby.” They also aver that they are not liable for the alleged defalcation in the accounts of said Carson, because he acted as paymaster out of the limits of the district of Louisiana, and the said deficiencies, if any exist, occurred without the limits of said district.

Before the jury were -sworn, the defendants offered a statement to the court, for the purpose of obtaining a special verdict on the facts, in .pursuance of the provisions of the tenth section of a statute of Louisiana, passed in 1817. But the court overruled the statement, and would not suffer the same to be given to the jury, for a special finding, because it was contrary to the practice of the court to compel a jury to find a special verdict. To this decision an exception was taken.

A transcript of the accounts of Carson, duly certified by the treasury department, was then given in evidence to the jury; and the judge charged the jury, that the bond sued on was not to be governed by the laws of Louisiana, or those in force in the territory of Orleans, at the time said bond was-signed by A- L. Duncan, who signed it in New Orleans, in the then said territory; but that -this, and all similar bonds, must be considered as having been executed at the seat of government of the United States, and to be governed by the principles, of the common law' That although the copy of the bond sued on exhibited a scrawl instead of a seal, yet they had a right to *447 presume that the original 'bond had been executed according to law. That the jury were bound to presume, in the absence of all proof as to the limits of the district of Orleans, that the defalcation of Carson occurred in the district of Orleans, although it was proved that he disbursed moneys, as paymaster, at fort Stoddart and at Washington, in the territory of Mississippi; and that if the defendant Carson had acted as paymaster beyond the limits of the district of Orleans, it was incumbent on the defendants to prove the fact. And the judge also charged the. jury, that the possession of the bond by the treasury department was prima facie evidence of delivery — to which charge exceptions were taken.

The jury rendered a verdict against, the defendants, for six thousand one hundred and twenty-six dollars, with interest, &c.

This judgment the plaintiffs in error pray may be reversed, on the following grounds:

1. Because the surety, A.bner L. Duncan, is not bound; as when he executed the bond| it was agreed that it should also be signed by Thomas-Duncan.'

2.. Because William Carson was appointed paymaster for a certain district, and the judgment covers defalcations, which may have occurred out of such district.

3. The rejection by the- court of the statement of facts, on which a special verdict was prayed.

4. Because the rejection of this statement precluded the defendants from proving that the bond was delivered as an escrow.

As to the first error assigned, it appear?, on an inspection of the bond, it was drawn in the names of Abner L, Duncan, John Carson, and Thomas Duncan, as sureties lor William Carson, but that Thomas Duncan never signed it. There are no witnesses to the bond, but, on the day of its date, it was acknowledged by William Carson and Abner L. Duncan, before a notary public at New Orleans, and on the 21st day of. May following, John Carson acknowledged it before a notary public at Harrisburgh,. in Pennsylvania.

To sustain this ground, reference is made to a decision of the supreme court of Louisiana in the case of Wells v . Dill, reported in 1 Martin, ¿92. In their decision, the court > say, that, *448 “ the defendant is sued on the ground that he signed as surety, an instrument, purporting to be a- bond, signed by Charles Blanchard, for his faithful performance of the duties of curator, to. the vacant estate , of one Jared Risdon, . deceased. In opposition to this action, the defendant relies, principally, oh the want of. the signature of another person to the instrument, whose name is mentioned in the body of it as co-surety. The bond is drawn in the name of Charles R. Blanchard, as principal, and the'defendant and Walter Turnbull as sureties. At the bottom, the names of Blanchard and Dill are affixed"; that of Turnbull is wanting. We agree with the defendant, that, Under these Circumstances, his signature to'the obligation does not bind him. The contract is incomplete, until all the parties contemplated to join in its execution affix, their names to it, and while in this state cannot be enforced against any one of them. The law presumes that the party signing did so, upon the condition that the. other obligors named in the instrument should sign it: and their failure to comply with their agreement gives him a right to retrace” Pothier is cited by the court to sustain this principle.

There can be ho doubt, that under the civil law, the principle, is correctly stated by the court. Itmust .be observed, however, that the court say, the want of Turnbull’s signature was principally relied on to invalidate the bond; so that there Beems to have been.no circumstances going to refute the presumption against its validity, arising frpm its face; and that the omission of the signature, was not the only ground of objection to it.

It is a principle of the common law, too well settled to be controverted, that where an instrument is delivered as an escrow, or where one surety has signed it on condition that it Shall.be signed by another before its delivery, no obligation is incurred until the condition shall happen. And if it appeared in the present case, that Abner L.

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Bluebook (online)
32 U.S. 435, 8 L. Ed. 739, 7 Pet. 435, 1833 U.S. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abner-l-duncans-heirs-representatives-v-united-states-scotus-1833.