Briggs v. Hinton

82 Tenn. 233
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 82 Tenn. 233 (Briggs v. Hinton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Briggs v. Hinton, 82 Tenn. 233 (Tenn. 1884).

Opinions

Deaderick, C. J.,

delivered tlie opinion of the court.

On November 28, 1873, complainant filed his bill in the chancery court at Nashville against defendants, alleging that at the April term, 1862, of the county court of said county, the complainant and M. S. Stewart, with others not made defendants because insolvent, became securities upon the official bond of defendant, Hinton, who was qualified as sheriff of said county;that said Hinton afterwards appointed one Thomas Hobson as one of his deputies, and took from him an official bond in the penalty of $10,000, for the faithful performance of his duties as deputy sheriff, with Nicholas Hobson and Reuben Tally as his sureties; that said deputy afterwards received for collection an execution for $1,191.40, in favor of one Franklin against one McKay, upon which said deputy made an insufficient return, and thereupon, upon motion, judgment was rendered in favor of Franklin, on April 17, 1868, for $1,503 and costs, against Hinton and his sureties on his sheriff’s bond in the circuit court of said county; that said Hinton consented to an appeal by said N. and Thomas Hobson giving- bond and security for appeal, which they did, defendant, Narcissa Horne, becoming security on said appeal bond. By an amendment, it is charged, that Hinton alone appealed, and that none of the securities on his official bond appealed, and a copy of said appeal bond is exhibited with the amended bill. The bill then alleges that the other securities knew nothing of the appeal, and never authorized the same or signed the [235]*235bond therefor, and complainant insists that he was not liable on the judgment rendered on said appeal by the Supreme Court, as he did not appeal from the judgment of the circuit court against him.

It is further alleged, that on December 16, 1872, judgment was rendered against all the defendants below by the Supreme Court, and against the parties to the bond for appeal for the whole amount of the judgment below, and that he, the complainant, has paid the same, amounting to $2,234.50.

It is further alleged, that Hinton, on March 28, 1870, took a judgment over on Thomas Hobson’s bond against him- and Nicholas Hobson, for $1,688.52, and that Reuben Tally, also a surety on Thomas Hobson’s bond, was then dead, and no judgment was taken against him. Said Tally’s heirs are made defendants to this bill.

Complainant insists he has the right to be reimbursed for payment of said judgment, by the parties who appealed and signed the appeal bond, Mrs. Horne being surety thereon is first liable, and to contribution by Mrs. Stewart, if ’ not thus reimbursed, she being the administratrix of her late husband, M. S. Stewart, deceased, who was the only other solvent surety, beside complainant, of said Hinton.

A second amended bill was filed by complainant, making the administrator de bonis non of the estates of E. A. Horne and Reuben Tally defendants, the complainant claiming that he is entitled to be substituted to the rights of 'Hinton in the bond of Thomas Hobson, his deputy, who made the insufficient return, [236]*236and that said Horne’s and Tally’s estates are solvent, and they are the only solvent sureties of said Thomas Hobson.

Answers were filed by Mrs. Horne, the adminis-tratrix of Horne, Tally and Mrs. Stewart, the heirs-at-law of Tally and Stewart, and by Hobson and wife, raising questions presented in the report of the Referees.

The chancellor decreed that Hinton alone appealed from, the judgment of the circuit court against him and his sureties on his official bond, without the knowledge of said sureties, and gave as sureties for the appeal N. Hobson and Narcissa Horne, in the sum of ■|3,006.22; that the judgment of the circuit coürt was affirmed by the Supreme Court, December 16, 1872, and was so entered as to include the sureties of both the appeal bond and official bond; that neither complainant nor M. L. Stewart knew of or consented to the appeal, nor was either of them on the appeal bond, and neither had knowledge of the suit until after the affirmance aforesaid, and that said judgment was paid by complainant.

The court further .adjudged that the Supreme Court had no jurisdiction of complainant or of Stewart, and that the judgment against them was void. His Honor further held that the payment of the judgment by the complainant was officious as to Stejvart, and that he had no right to call upon his estate for contribution; that the payment as to defendant, Horne, was a ratification of the appeal by complainant, and he is not entitled to recover against her; and that the second clause of the demurrer of Tally’s heirs should be sustained; and [237]*237the chancellor dismissed the bill as to Mrs. Stewart,. Mrs. Horne, and Tally’s heirs. But he rendered a decree in favor of complainant against Gannaway, the administrator of Tally, for the sum of $3,210, to be paid out of the personal assets of said estate, but as it appeared, no such assets had come, or would come to his hands, complainant was allowed to proceed to subject the property that had passed to the heirs. The chancellor also rendered a decree in favor of the complainant against Hinton, the sheriff, and Hobson, his deputy, for the sum of $3,210.

Complainant appealed from so much of the decree as refused him relief against Mrs. Horne- and Mrs, Stewart as administratrix, and has also filed the record for writ of error.

The Referees finck that it is satisfactorily shown that Hinton alone appealed, and that Nicholas Hob-son procured Mrs. Horne to join him in becoming surety on the appeal bond. Nicholas -Hobson, and Mrs. Horne’s husband, then dead, were sureties to Hinton on the deputy sheriff’s bond, and the complainant and Stewart took no appeal; this is also apparent from the bond itself, as it purports to be the bond of Hinton, N. Hobson and Mrs. Horne. And in this conclusion we think they are correct. The complainant and Mrs. Stewart not having in fact appealed, this court had no jurisdiction to render any judgment against them, and the fact that they- did not appeal may be shown either by the record or by proof aliunde: 8 Hum., 489; 12 Heis., 303; 18 Wall., 466.

[238]*238But although complainant was not bound by the Supreme Court judgment, he was bound by another judgment for the same original liability, upon which an execution might have issued, and would have issued, if he had not paid the amount demanded.

The Referees also find that when complainant paid the debt to Franklin he became entitled to the rights of Franklin in the appeal bond, and the sureties in the appeal bond, by the judgment of the Supreme Court, were liable for the debt before the sureties on the official bond; that the obligors in the bond ■of the deputy are next liable, and next the solvent sureties on the sheriff’s official bond. They, therefore, recommended a reversal of the decree.

To this report Mrs. Horne and Tally’s heirs except. *J

Mrs. Horne’s first and second exceptions go to so much of the report as finds that she was surety on the appeal bond for Hinton only, and not for complainant, and in admitting parol evidence to contradict the recitals of the bond, that all the sureties on the official bond appealed.

The judgment of the circuit court was rendered against the sheriff and his sureties, and the record recites the ' defendants except, and they also pray an appeal, etc., which is granted, bond and security having been given according to law. The bond for appeal recites: “We, Jas. M.

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82 Tenn. 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/briggs-v-hinton-tenn-1884.