Aldrich v. Kirkland

40 S.C.L. 334
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMay 15, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 40 S.C.L. 334 (Aldrich v. Kirkland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aldrich v. Kirkland, 40 S.C.L. 334 (S.C. Ct. App. 1853).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Withers, J.

One Cave filed a bill in Equity against Lewis Kirkland, and charged, that he (Cave,) under and by virtue of a will, was vested with one-fifth part of certain real and personal property, in trust for Dorcas, the wife of Lewis Kirkland, free from all debts, contracts, <fcc., of her husband: that about 1836 he paid over to Lewis Kirkland and Dorcas his wife, $400 in cash, delivered to them a woman slave, Lucy, estimated to be worth $500, certain cattle worth $120, and other articles of the value of $48 69 — considered as the share of Dorcas under the will— and took no security from them, or fromLewis Kirkland, the latter [337]*337of whom, however, was well aware of the trust attaching to the property and fund : — That Lewis Kirkland sold Lucy, and with the proceeds and the cash delivered to him purchased a negro, Nimrod, and other property, taking a title to himself, and a negro named Cumba, the title to whom he took in the name of the complainant: — That Dorcas had died and had left the trust estate above described distributable, under the Act of 1791, among Lewis, her husband, and certain children : — He prayed process against Lewis and the children, and to the end that the rights of the several parties might be secured, “that the said Lewis Kirkland may be enjoined from disposing of any of the trust property, or of the property purchased with the trust fund; and that he may account for any deficiency or loss incurred by his mismanagement or interference tvith the said trust property.” To such end he prayed a writ of injunction to be directed to Lewis Kirkland; and stvore to the bill on the 2d May, 1849. On that day Mr. Commissioner Aldrich ordered the writ of injunction, and “ that the said Lewis Kirkland do give bond and good security, in the penal sum of one thousand three hundred dollars, conditioned for the forthcoming of the cattle and the slaves, Nimrod and Cumba, named in the bill, to be subject to the final order of the Court, in the premises, and also conditioned, that he, the said Lewis Kirkland, shall abide by and perform such orders and decrees as the Court shall make, in the premises

Lewis Kirkland, being tardy in responding to the command of the writ of injunction, was required, under notice of the 5th May, to obey the process, on or before the 7th, or that an attachment issue.

On the 11th May, Lewis Kirkland,together with this defendant, William, executed a bond, to A. P. Aldrich, Commissioner, in the penal sum of $> 1,300, conditioned as follows:

That if the above named Lewis Kirkland, his heirs, executors and administrators, shall and do well and truly cause certain property, to wit, twenty head of cattle, and two slaves, named Nimrod and Cumba, to be forthcoming, to be subject to the final [338]*338order of the Court of Equity in a certain cause of Mathew J. Cave, trustee vs. Lewis Kirkland and others, bill filed the 5th May, 1849 ; and if the above bound Lewis shall abide by and perform such orders and decrees as the said Court shall make in the said cause, without fraud,” &c.

The Commissioner made a report at February term, 1851, and accompanied the same with the statement of a money account between Lewis Kirkland and Mathew J. Cave, trustee, wherein Lewis Kirkland is charged as of February, 1836, (besides the interest account,) with the value of Lucy, $500; cash paid to him, $400; value of cattle, $120 ; equal to $1,020 : — value of Nimrod and interest from 20th April, 1849, $449, — credited by amount of the sale of the cattle, $93 15, which had been received by the trustee ; and after deducting the share of Lewis Kirkland, being one-third, the balance due to the trustee was stated at $959 53.

A Chancellor confirmed the report in February, 1851, and made it the judgment of the Coitrt: He ordered, further, that Lewis Kirkland pay to the trustee the balance found due. “ It is further ordered,” (said the decretal order,) “that unless the said Lewis Kirkland do, by the 5th day of March next, fulfil the conditions of the bond given by him in this cause, and dated the 11th May, 1849, the Commissioner do put the said bond in suit.”

Upon the bond the action, which has given rise to the present appeal, was instituted against ffm. Kirkland, surety. What the pleadings were we know not; it may not be material that we should. It appears, from the Circuit report, that no order for the delivery of the property specified in the bond, (to wit,. Nimrod, Cumba, and twenty head of cattle,) was ever made byr the Court of Equity. The cattle (it would appear) had been delivered — at any rate, Lewis Kirkland was charged with $120 and credited with $93 15 on that item. He was charged with all the money he received in 1836, a part of which, the bill stated, was laid out for the purchase of Cumba, in the trustee’s: name, and a part for Nimrod. He was charged with the price. [339]*339of Lucy, a portion of the trust property, (alleged to have been sold by him,) at $500.

On the Circuit the account stated by the Commissioner and confirmed by the Court of Equity, was made the measure of damages, against this defendant, a surety. It was held “ that the condition was sufficiently comprehensive to cover any order the Court might make in the case.”

This ruling is resisted, upon motion for non-suit, or new trial, (as we are to infer it was on Circuit,) upon the grounds, that the Commissioner had no power to order a bond, or to take one, conditioned that a party shall abide by and perform a decree generally: that in any event the surety’s obligation does not arise if the principal (the defendant in Equity) is within the jurisdiction and accessible to an attachment: that, however valid this bond, the surety is liable only, on a proper construction of it. for the forthcoming of the specific property specified in it, and for which it was taken as security: that, the decretal order, however it might operate on Lewis Kirkland, is not conclusive on this defendant, and that it was incumbent on the plaintiff, upon pain of non-suit or defeat before the jury, to show, from other evidence, damages sustained by a breach of the bond, such as should affect the surety. We conceive such to be the import, though not the language, of the grounds of appeal urged here.

There are several observations which have suggested themselves, upon the face of the proceedings in Equity, which have been spread before this Court.

The order was to abide by and perform such orders and decrees as the Court shall make in the premises: the bond expressed it, “such orders and decrees as the said Court shall make in the cause." The “ premises ” of the order were, the forthcoming of the cattle, of Nimrod and Cunaba : the orders and decrees sought in the “ cause" and rendered too, embraced a wider range. A general account was made and affirmed. The decretal order directed suit on the bond if Lewis Kirkland did not “fulfil the conditions” of it by a day certain.

[340]*340The force and effect of such, and such like observations, in a law Court, are preceded by the inquiry, how far can we look into the proceedings in a cause in Equity, for the purpose of measuring or qualifying the liability of a party to a bond, sued in our Courts ? The case in the Court of Equity is referred to in the bond, eo nomine :

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.C.L. 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aldrich-v-kirkland-scctapp-1853.