Beale, Inc. v. Hawley

156 So. 529, 116 Fla. 445
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedSeptember 10, 1934
StatusPublished

This text of 156 So. 529 (Beale, Inc. v. Hawley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beale, Inc. v. Hawley, 156 So. 529, 116 Fla. 445 (Fla. 1934).

Opinions

Brown, J.

This case is before us to review a judgment entered in a summary proceedings instituted by affidavit for a distress' warrant under Sections 5423, et seq., Comp. Gen. Laws of 1927.

*447 One of the questions contained in the statement of questions involved in this case is as follows:

“Is a judgment which is entered against the principal and the sureties on a forthcoming bond in distress' proceedings, upon a default judgment for the plaintiff, valid, when the court does not find nor state the value of the property, as is required by the-statute? This judgment, so entered, was held valid and the lower court refused to grant a motion to set aside the judgment.”

It is true that the record in this case does not contain a copy of the bond, which is referred to both in the judgment of the court below and in the briefs in this case. A certified copy of the bond, duly certified by the clerk of the Circuit Court, was attached to a supplemental brief on behalf of plaintiff in error, which shows that it was a forthcoming bond. But we cannot consider this certified copy of the bond, in deciding this case, as it was not embraced in the transcript of the record certified to this Court, nor were any proceedings' taken to have it made or considered as a part of such transcript.

However, I do not deem this oversight to be fatal to the contention of the plaintiff in error in this case, because the judgment entered by the Circuit Judge recited that the bond in question was a “forthcoming bond,” and this recital must be deemed true and correct; at least where, as here, it is not clearly shown by other portions of the record to have been incorrect. 34 C. J. 503. See also Kroier v. Kroier, 95 Fla. 865, 116 So. 753.

The final judgment omitting the caption, reads as follows:

“This cause coming on to be heard upon application of plaintiff for final judgment and it appearing to the Court that a default was regularly and duly entered against the defendant, Beale, Incorporated, on the 21st day of July, A. D. 1932, and it appearing to the Court, upon affidavit *448 filed herein in support of plaintiff’s claim, that the defendant is in arrears of rent in the sum of $579.50, which is just, due and unpaid; and it being further made to appear to the Court that the property levied on for rent was retaken by the defendant upon filing a forthcoming bond in double the amount of plaintiff’s claim;

“It is Therefore Ordered and Adjudged that the plain-tiff, E. C. Hawley, do have and recover of and from the defendant, Beale, Incorporated, and of and from the sureties on said forthcoming bond, S. P. Beale, R. H. Hamilton and J. M. Stebbins' the sum of $579.50, together with the further sum of $7.65 costs of court to be taxed by the Clerk, -for all of which let execution issue.

- “Done and Ordered in Chambers at Bartow, Polk County, Florida, this 22nd day of July, A. D. 1932.”

■ On July 30, 1932, the defendant and his sureties filed a motion to vacate both the default and final judgment, 'upon several grounds', one of them being that the judgment ■was entered against the bondsmen “on the forthcoming bond filed in the above styled cause without first giving said bondsmen the right to produce the property levied upon ‘in this distress' proceedings.” • •

This motion was denied and the defendant and its three sureties sued out this writ of error'.

The distress' warrant was executed by the sheriff of Polk County, but his return did not set forth the value of the •property. levied upon, nor is it otherwise shown that the levying officer ascertained or set any value upon such •property.

Under Section 5425, C. G. L., the' property distrained may be restored to the defendant upon his giving a forth'coming bond in double the value of the property levied on conditioned upon the-forthcoming of the property to abide the final order of the court; or upon his giving a bond con *449 ditioned for the payment to the plaintiff of the amount or value of the rent which may be adjudicated to be payable to such plaintiff. The final judgment shows that the bond given in this case was a forthcoming bond. Section 5425 further provides that “Judgment be entered against the sureties on such bonds in the manner and with like effect as provided in Section 5282.”

This section reads as follows:

“5282 (3429) Judgment against Principal and Sureties.— If judgment by default be entered in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant shall have retaken the property upon a forthcoming bond, final judgment by default shall be entered at the same time against the defendant and the sureties on the bond for the amount of the judgment against the defendant if it be less than the value of the property as fixed by the officer, or for the value of the property so fixed if such value be less than the judgment against the defendant. If the defendant shall have retaken the property upon a bond to pay the debt, such judgment shall also be entered against the sureties for the amount of the judgment against the defendant. In- case of a judgment against defendant after trial, judgment shall be entered against the sureties as above provided, except that the value of the property retaken by defendant shall be found by the judge or the jury (as the case may be tried before the one or the other, and stated in the finding or verdict.”

It will be noted that Section 5282 preserves the distinction between a forthcoming bond and a bond to pay the debt, as to a judgment against the defendant and his sureties on a forthcoming bond, where default judgment has already been entered against the plaintiff, the statute requires that the final judgment shall be for the “amount of the judgment against the defendant if it be less than the value of the property as fixed by the officer, or for the value of the property *450 so fixed if such value be less than the judgment against the defendant.” The value of the property, not having been fixed by the levying officer, and the final judgment being based, by its terms, upon a forthcoming bond, not a bond to pay the debt, there was' no proper basis for the Court’s final judgment, as the court could not tell whether the amount of the judgment rendered against the defendant and his sureties was in excess of the value of the property levied on, “as fixed by the officer,” or not. The plaintiff evidently tried to cure this omission to have the officer fix the value of the property by stating in his own affidavit filed in court the day the final judgment was rendered that “the value of the property retaken by the defendant by giving a forthcoming bond is in excess of $600.00,” but this could not avail to supply an omission of a matter made vital by the language of the statute as a basis for the final judgment against the defendant and his sureties. This court has long held to a strict construction of the statutes involved in this case, as against the landlord and in favor of the tenant and his sureties. The issuance of a distress warrant for rent is a summary statutory proceeding, and though it be pursued in the circuit court, a court of general jurisdiction, the statutory requirements' must be substantially complied with. See Hooks v.

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Related

Fotinos v. Romack Co., Inc.
134 So. 506 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1931)
East Coast Stores, Inc. v. Cuthbert Et Ux.
133 So. 863 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1931)
Kroier v. Kroier
116 So. 753 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1928)
Hooks v. Farmers Union Warehouse Co.
62 Fla. 496 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1911)
Hardee v. Myakka Fruit Farms Co.
94 So. 504 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
156 So. 529, 116 Fla. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beale-inc-v-hawley-fla-1934.