Bradley v. Reynolds

23 A. 928, 61 Conn. 271, 1892 Conn. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 5, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 23 A. 928 (Bradley v. Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley v. Reynolds, 23 A. 928, 61 Conn. 271, 1892 Conn. LEXIS 1 (Colo. 1892).

Opinion

Torrance, J.

This is an action against the defendant as surety upon a replevin bond. The complaint is in the ordinary form setting out in substance the following facts.

On the first day of August, 1889, the plaintiff, as deputy sheriff, attached, as the property of William M. and Jesse Reynolds, the property described in the complaint, in a suit brought by one Swift against them. On the next day, John J. and Jane A. Murray, claiming to be the owners of the attached property, brought an action of replevin against the *278 plaintiff, and caused the attached property to be delivered to them. The bond sued upon was given in that suit.

.On the 7th of May, 1890, Swift recovered judgment in his suit for a sum much greater than the value of the attached property. On the 15th of October, 1890, judgment was rendered in the replevin suit in favor of the present, plaintiff, as defendant therein, for the return of the property replevied, one dollar damages, and coáts. On the 22d of October, 1890, execution was taken out .on the Swift judgment, demand on the execution was in effect made, but it was not paid, and no property of the judgment debtors could be found, although search was duly made therefor. After-wards demand was made with the execution upon the defendant for the property replevied, but he refused and neglected to turn out tlm same, and the execution was returned unsatisfied. None of the replevied property has ever been returned to any one in satisfaction of the Swift judgment.

To this complaint the defendant, by way of answer, filed four special defenses. The first defense simply denied that search had been made upon the Swift execution for property of the judgment debtors, and that none could be found on which to levy, as alleged in the complaint, and substantially admitted all the other allegations. To this defense the plaintiff demurred, on the ground that the allegation in question was mere surplusage. The court sustained the demurrer, and this action of the court is assigned for error.

“Surplusage is that which is impertinent or entirely superfluous, as not being necessary either to the substance or the form of the pleading.” Gould’s Pleading, chap. 8, § 11. The allegation in question was “impertinent and entirely superfluous,” inasmuch as if it had been stricken out a good cause of action would have remained. Persse v. Watrous, 30 Conn., 148. It was not, as claimed by the defendant, an “immaterial averment,” in the technical sense, that is, “a statement of unnecessary particulars, in connection with and as descriptive of what is material.” Gould’s Pleading, chap. 3, § 185. It was mere surplusage, and this in general *279 does not vitiate. The court did not err in sustaining the demurrer to the first defense.

The material part of the second defense reads as follows: —“If the said nominal plaintiff, as a defendant in the replevin suit of John J. Murray and Jane A. Murray against himself, as deputy sheriff, recovered judgment as alleged, on the 15th day of October, 1890, said judgment was obtained by collusion between the said nominal plaintiff, Bradley, and the real plaintiff, Swift, on the one hand, and the said John J. and Jane A. Murray, plaintiffs in the replevin suit, and without notice to the defendant in this suit, and for the purpose of obtaining a judgment against the defendant in this suit. The actual title to the replevied property on the 2d day of August, 1889, and from that time until on and after the 15th day of October, 1890, was in the said John J. Murray and Jane A. Murray; and the judgment so obtained by agreement and collusion between the said nominal and real plaintiffs in this suit and the plaintiffs in the replevin suit was a fraud upon the defendant in this suit; and said judgment was obtained solely for the purpose of compelling the defendant in this suit to pay a large sum of money to the said Swift.” The plaintiff demurred to this defense and the court sustained the demurrer, and this is assigned for error.

The question is, whether the facts alleged and admitted by the demurrer show that the judgment in the replevin suit was obtained by fraud on the part of Swift, or Bradley, or both. It is not enough that the conduct of the Murrays in suffering judgment in the replevin suit was a fraud upon the defendant, unless it also appears that the plaintiff or Swift or both participated in some way in that fraud. Nor is it enough merely to allege that the judgment in question was obtained by fraud and collusion on the part of the plaintiff and Swift with the Murrays. The facts stated and set forth must be such as to constitute in law fraud and collusion on the part of the plaintiff and Swift. Gates v. Steele, 58 Conn., 316.

Now if all the facts and circumstances alleged in the *280 second defense are as alleged, still it does not follow that the plaintiff or Swift or both committed any fraud upon the defendant, unless they knew at the time that the replevied property belonged to the Murrays. If the defense in question had alleged that the plaintiff and Swift, with knowledge that the property really belonged to the Murrays, had by collusion with them obtained this judgment, the case would have been quite different. But no such allegation is anywhere made. If they did not know this fact at that time, then all that it is charged that they did they had a perfect right to do. Swift and the plaintiff had attached the property as the property of William M. and Jesse Reynolds. The replevin suit, so far as we know from the conduct of the parties, was defended in the belief that the property did not belong to the Murrays. Under such circumstances the plaintiff and Swift had a right, so long as they were acting in good faith, to take a judgment against the Murrays by nonsuit or otherwise, in a suit to which they believed the Murrays had no good defense; and they had a right to do this as a part of a process which would end in subjecting the defendant to liability on his bond, and that too without notice to him. Without this element of knowledge on the part of Swift and Bradley, we are unable to see how, in doing what it is charged they did, they were guilty of any fraud or collusion of any kind towards any person.

If the plaintiff and Swift were guilty of no fraud in obtaining the- judgment, then the mere fact, if it be a fact, that the Murrays were guilty of fraud or other wrongful conduct against the defendant in failing to prosecute the suit, would be of no avail in this suit against innocent' parties. Martin v. Campbell, 120 Mass., 126; State ex rel. Cartwright v. Holmes, 69 Ind., 577.

So far as the defense now in question is concerned, the Murrays, as to the plaintiff and Swift, appear to be mere third parties and strangers, whose frauds against the defendant of the kind in question, if they committed any, would not affect innocent parties. Bigelow’s Law of Fraud, 252, *281 §12. The demurrer to the second defense was properly-sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
23 A. 928, 61 Conn. 271, 1892 Conn. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-reynolds-conn-1892.