Clark v. Prentice & Weissinger

42 Ky. 584
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 8, 1843
StatusPublished

This text of 42 Ky. 584 (Clark v. Prentice & Weissinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Prentice & Weissinger, 42 Ky. 584 (Ky. Ct. App. 1843).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action of assumpsit, brought by Clark as the assignee, against Prentice & Weissinger, as the assignors of a note executed by John Stivers to Allen & Merrick, for $1258, due on the 25th of July, 1839; and the sole question is, whether due diligence was used in pursuing the obligor? By various mesne assignments, which are without date, the note came to Prentice & Weissinger, who assigned it, without date, to George Clark or order. On the 2oth of August, 1839, Clark brought suit, by petition and summons, against the obligor, and on the same day the process was served, which was in time for the September term of the Jefferson Circuit Court, the first regular term after the note became due; and although by the statute regulating proceedings in the Jefferson Circuit Court, the first Monday in each month was made a return day for process, and petitions might be called on the succeeding Wednesday in each month, yet as it was barely possible for the process to have been served after the note became due, in time for the petition to have stood for trial on the Wednesday after the first Monday in August following, as the note may not have been assigned before it fell due, and as there was, in fact, no call of the petition docket either in August or September, nor until October, when this case was called for trial, on a demurrer to the petition, we are of opinion, as the case now appears, that there was no failure of diligence in bringing the suit.

It appears, however, that in- October, the demurrer was sustained, because in copying into the petition the assignment from Prentice & Weissinger to Clark or order, the words “or order,” were omitted, and the plaintiff having amended the petition in this respect, a continuance was [585]*585granted to the defendant on account of this amendment; by which the judgment was postponed until the 11th day of December following, there having been no intermediate call of the petition docket. Whether the demurrer was properly sustained or not, the amendment certainly occasioned no surprise to the • defendant, and therefore, constituted no ground for continuing the cause, against the consent of the plaintiff: Watts vs McKinney, (1 Marshall, 561;) and the plaintiff, therefore, should not be prejudiced in his remedy against his assignors, by this error of the Court.

The steps taken by assignee to recover of the -debtor.

The judgment having been rendered on the 11th of December, 1839, an execution issued on the 10th day of January, 1840, under a general order of the plaintiff’s attorneys, previously made in the memorandum book of the Clerk, directing him to issue executions as soon as practicable, on all judgments obtained by them. This execution was indorsed by the Sheriff as having come to his hands on the 25th of January, 1840, and was, on the same day, returned “no property found and the principal difficulty on the question of due diligence, arises on these facts, and the explanation given of them in the evidence.

It appears that most of the attorneys in the Jefferson Circuit Court had made memorandums for the issuing of executions, similar to that above stated, and that such memorandums were acted on by the Clerk, who accounts for the delay in issuing this execution by stating that numerous judgments were obtained at the December term; that soon after the termination of ten days from ,the rendition of the judgment, the Christmas holidays came on, and then the 8th of January, on which occasions it was not usual to get the services of the deputies in the office; and that this execution was issued in its regular rotation and as soon as the business of the office would permit. It appears further, from the statement of the Clerk and Sheriffs, that the Sheriff of Jefferson County had no office in Louisville, but that there was and had been, for many years in the Clerk’s office, a box, known to all having business in the office as the Sheriff’s box, in which it was the constant and notorious habit of the Clerk to place [586]*586executions and other process, when issued, and to which the acting Sheriffs resorted daily for such process, and that it was the invariable practice, with some casual ex. ceptions, for the Sheriffs, when they took an execution out of the box, to have it entered on the execution book, which would show the time it came to the officer’s hands. The Clerk also stated that this execution against Stivers, when issued as above stated, was lodged in the Sheriff’s box, but that the execution book did not show when it was received by the Sheriff, though it showed that it was returned on the 25th of January.

It has never been held “that the •assignee was bound to use the utmost possible diligence, to run a race against time or to use greater diligence than a man of ordinary prudence might be expected to use if he .were solely interested,” to recover the debt, in order to preserve his recourse against his assignor.

[586]*586The deputy Sheriff, who received and returned the execution, did not particularly remember that it came to his hands on the 25th of January, as stated in the indorsement, but that was his best recollection; he was also under the impression, though by no means certain, that it was then placed in bis hands by one of the attorneys for the plaintiff. Executions were taken from the Sheriff’s box and entered on the execution book on the 10th day of January, and for many successive days thereafter, and one standing next on the execution book to that now in question, was entered as taken out on the 15th of January.

It was further proved, that in November, 1838, executions came to hand against Stivers, to the amount of $30,000 or more, all of which had been returned “no property;” that other executions which issued through the year 1839 and 1840, had been returned in the same way, with the exception of one, issued in the fall of 1839, on which, in consequence of a discovery by the plaintiff therein, of some household goods, $30 or $40 had béen made; and that during the year 1839 and 1840, he had been utterly and hopelessly insolvent, so that the Sheriffs, on finding executions against him in their box, did not think it necessary to take them out, except for the purpose of returning on them “no property found,” which they felt authorized to do at once, from having made diligent but unsuccessful search for property.

Upon these facts, stated rather more in detail by the witnesses, the Court, on motion of the defendants, instructed the jury to find as in case of a non-suit, which [587]*587aould only have been justifiable on the ground that on the most favorable inferences deducible from the evidence, the plaintiff had failed to show that he had used due or reasonable diligence in prosecuting his remedy against the obligor. But it has never been held that an assignee was bound to use the utmost possible diligence, or to run a race against time, or to use greater diligence than a man of ordinary prudence might be expected to use, if he were solely interested. The plaintiff having been entitled to a judgment at the September term, and having then demanded it, and not being blameable for the continuance and consequent postponement of the judgment, the question is, whether there was a failure of reasonable diligence afterwards, in having the execution issued and placed in the officer’s hands.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Ky. 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-prentice-weissinger-kyctapp-1843.