Chadbourne v. Hodgdon
This text of 1 N.H. 359 (Chadbourne v. Hodgdon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
This scire facias is founded on the 7th section of our statute of September, 1792, “for regulating process and trials in civil causes.,: — N. LI. Laics, 100.
The latter part of this section provides, that the person who shall endorse a writ for the plaintiff “ shall be liable in “ case of the plaintiff’s living out of the state, or upon the “ neglect, inability or avoidance of the plaintiff, and return “ of non est inventas ; or that such execution as may have “ issued against the plaintiff is unsatisfied, to pay the defend- “ ant all such costs as he shall recover, <fcc. on scire facias - to be brought against such endorser within one year from “ the time of rendering judgment against the plaintiff, and “ not afterwards.”
[360]*360The two last causes which are assigned for the demurrer in this case, appear to be only arguments predicated on the sufficiency of the first cause. Whether that be sufficient or not is, then, the true question : and this question must be decided against the plaintiff, if the return on his execution was not made at the time required by the above statute.
Though the “return of” writ may sometimes mean the re-delivery of it to the court from which it issued,
In this case the statement of the officer’s doings appears to have been made some time before the return day of the execution ; %nd whenever a precept has actually been served before such day, this statement should be made before ; because it should recite the facts truly.-9 Mass. R. 393. Hayward vs. Hildreth.-11 do. 210. — 13 do. 75. — 13 Johns. 255.-4 East 606.
But when, as here, the precept has not been served, though the officer may be guilty of no wrong in stating that fact on the back of the precept before the .return day, yet it deserves much consideration whether the person in whose favour an execution has issued can avail himself of such a return so as to charge the endorser,, under the provisions of the above statute.
The design of the statute seems to have been to provide security for the defendant’s cost. The antient pledges, at common law, who were security for his cost, became liable to the defendant on the rendition of judgment against the plaintiff
From the phraseology of this statute, also, compared with the “Act regulating bail in civil canses,”
That this return, too, cannot be made before the return day of the execution, is inferable from the rule of practice both in England and Neiv-Yorlc, that the execution must be lodged in the sheriff’s hands the whole of the last four days of its life, in order that the bail may receive notice of the intent to fix him, and then surrender the principal or pay the iudgment
[362]*362In the present ease, however, the return day was in September, and the return itself is alleged to have been made in the July preceding. It therefore furnishes no evidence of that u liability or avoidance” of the plaintiff between July and September which the statute considers a condition precedent to the recovery against the endorser. Had there been no date to the return, perhaps we might have presumed it was made on the return day : and, therefore, evidence of an avoidance till that time. So, if parol testimony were admissible to show an inability or avoidance, we might receive proof of one which was subsequent to the date of the return, and was continued to the return day. But it is obvious, from the language of the statute, that the only evidence of “ inability or avoidance” is a proper “ return of non est in-ventus, or that such execution as may have issued against the plaintiff is unsatisfied.”
We have been able to find no precedent resembling the ease under discussion except that of Palmer vs. Potter et al., Cr. El. 512. The principles of that ease, particularly as reported in Moore 431, are much in point, and, coupled with the above reasoning, justify us in rendering judgment for the defendant.
Let the scire facias be quashed.
3 El. C. 275.
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1 N.H. 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chadbourne-v-hodgdon-nhsuperct-1819.