Burgess v. Lloyd

7 Md. 178
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 7 Md. 178 (Burgess v. Lloyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burgess v. Lloyd, 7 Md. 178 (Md. 1854).

Opinion

Tuck, J.,

delivered the opinion of this court.

This cause comes before the court on the following slate of the pleadings, which have been amended since the former appeal, reported in 4 Gill, 187. The declaration is in the usual form, not assigning breaches. The defendant pleaded, first, general performance by Speake and Pye, to which the plaintiff replied, assigning three breaches, as follows : 1st. Thai. Speake and Pye did not prosecute the injunction with effect; 2nd, That they did not pay the judgment and costs, mentioned in the recital of the bond; 3rd, That they did not pay all costs, damages and charges, occasioned by the delay of execution on the plaintiffs’ judgment. These replications conclude with a verification. The defendants rejoined: 1st, That Speake and Pye did prosecute the writ with effect; 2nd, That they did pay the judgment and costs, mentioned in the bond; 3rd, That they did pay the costs, damages and charges, &c., concluding severally to the country; to each of which the similiter was entered. The pleadings on the plea of general performance were thus brought to issue.

The second plea averred that Speake and Pye prosecuted the writ with effect; that the court of chancery decreed that they should not pay the judgment and costs recited in the bond; and that they obeyed all the orders and decrees of that court, concluding with a verification: to which the plaintiff replied, that the principals in the bond did not prosecute with effect, and that the court of chancery did not decree that they should not pay the judgment and costs recited in the bond, concluding to the country, on which the similiter was entered.

The third plea, that they did prosecute with effect, and did [194]*194obey all orders and decrees of the chancery court, concluding with a verification, was also replied to by a traverse, that they did not prosecute with effect, and did not obey, &c., and tender of issue, on which issue was joined.

The fourth plea, plene administravit, and the fifth, no assets of Thomas Burgess were replied to, and issues framed in the usual manner.

The sixth plea averred, that Speake and Pye prosecuted the writ with effect, until they died, after which the suit in chancery abated ; to which the plaintiff replied, that they had not prosecuted as stated, and that the suit had not abated, concluding with a verification. The defendants’ rejoinder to this replication reiterated the matters of the plea, and tendered an- issue, which was accepted.

The seventh plea, non est factum by Burgess, was replied to by a traverse, and issue entered in the usual form.

We have noticed the pleadings with some particularity, because several of the questions raised in the court below, are to be considered with reference to the issues.

The first exception relates to the admissibility of certain evidence offered by the defendant, for the purpose of showing, that a case on the equity side of Charles county court, between Speake and Pye, and the obligees in the bond, had abated and was never revived, which the court rejected as inadmissible for that purpose. We do not discover any error in this ruling of the court. The defendant had himself offered evidence, by the docket entries, that the injunction in that equity case was dissolved on the 27th March 1840.-Upon what principle could he be permitted to show, by parol, that the suit had abated before that time ? We think this question is substantially settled in 4 Gill, 192, 193. But the offer was properly rejected for another reason. The defendants’ sixth plea, alleged the prosecution by the principals in the bond, and their performance of the orders and decrees of the court of chancery, until their death, by which the suit abated. Evidence of the abatement of a suit between the same parties in another court, could not establish the issue joined-on that allegation. This exception-is affirmed.

[195]*195The second exception was taken by the defendant, to the refusal of the court to grant five prayers tendered by her, and to an instruction given by the court. The first of these prayers is confined, in terms, to the issue joined on the first assignment of breaches replied to the plea of general performance, and asserts that, under that issue, the burden of proof is on the plaintiff, and that he cannot recover under that assignment, because there is no evidence of any breach of the condition of the writing obligatory, as therein averted on the part of the plaintiff. The only question on this prayer, being, whether, under this issue, the burden of proving the prosecution of the injunction with effect, was upon the plaintiff or defendant?

We do not consider the course the pleadings have taken as obnoxious to the objections urged in behalf of the appellant. The plea of general performance, in these cases, denies the plaintiffs’ right to recover, because the principals have performed all the conditions annexed to their obligation, and, for the purpose of giving certainty and precision to the issues, the law requires the plaintiff to assign particularly wherein the condition of the bond has been forfeited, to enable the defendant to plead more specially. In this case the plaintiff has adopted a short form of assigning breaches, which was approved in Karthaus vs. Owings, 2 Gill & Johns., 430. And indeed, this and the other two breaches assigned in reply to the plea of general performance, were before the court on the former appeal, and must have been recognized asa proper mode of pleading, because the rejoinders to these breaches were held bad, on general demurrer, when, if the fault had been in the replication, the court would have ascended to the first error, going beyond the pleading demurred to, as they did in reference to the defendants’ fifth rejoinder. Since that case, the same form of assigning breaches was employed in Frantz vs. Smith, 5 Gill, 280, in an action on an appeal bond, where the court decided that the recital of the judgment in the bond, relieved the plaintiff from the burden of offering the judgment in evidence. It is true that the plaintiff proved [196]*196that the appeal had not been prosecuted with effect, but no point was presented or decided on that part of the case. It js authority, however, to show that the defendant is estopped from denying the debt as recited in the bond, and that no proof of the judgment was necessary in this case.

The breach being well assigned, we have no doubt that the subsequent pleadings are correctly framed. The termination of the pleading, whether with an averment or to the country, has little to do with the question now under review. When new matter is alleged the party must generally verify; but where the plea produces a direct affirmative or negative, by denying the allegation in the declaration, it should conclude to the country, whether the affirmative of the issue is held by the plaintiff or defendant, and the proof of the affirmative rests on him who asserts it. Union Bank vs. Ridgely, 1 H. & G., 415.

The pleadings in an action of replevin serve to illustrate this rule. The plea of property in the defendant concludes with a verification, the replication asserts the right of property to be, not in the defendant, but in the plaintiff, and tenders an issue to the country, which is accepted.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Md. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgess-v-lloyd-md-1854.