Commonwealth ex rel. Johnston v. Miller

21 Ky. 205, 5 T.B. Mon. 205, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 134
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 19, 1827
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Ky. 205 (Commonwealth ex rel. Johnston v. Miller) 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
Commonwealth ex rel. Johnston v. Miller, 21 Ky. 205, 5 T.B. Mon. 205, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 134 (Ky. Ct. App. 1827).

Opinion

íudg'c Mures

delitercd the Opinion of the Court.

This is an action’of debt, bfdught by the appellant, as relator, after he came of jftdl age, against the appellees, one as principal and the other as security, on a bond executed by the principal as guardian for the relator.

The declaration, after setting out both the penalty, and condition of the bond, (both which were in usual form,) sets out for breach that the guardian had “not well and truly collected and accounted for and paid over to his ward, divers large sums of money, to-wit: $520, which ivas due and owing to said ward, while the said appellee Miller, was his guardian, from Gabriel J. Johnston, due by note, dated 16th July, 1817, payable to said Miller as guardian for his said ward, within four months after its date, and also $127 50, due and owing to said ward, whilst said Miller ivas his guardian, but failed and [206]*206refused to collect said sums of the said Gabriel J Johnston, until by reason of said negligence on part °f said guardian, the said sums were entirely lost to the ward, he, the said Gabriel J. Johnston, having in the mean time beeorné utterly insolvent.”

plea, eoncliformcíTañd replication! Spccialplcai poplioation to the special pica.

To this declaration the defendant below pleaded: first, “ conditions performed,,” inusual form, to which the plaintiff replied, generally, that said conditions .were not performed, imd secondly, á special plea, to the following effect:

“That after the relator of the plaintiff had attained his full age, it was accorded and agreed by and between him and defendant, that the defendant should deliver to the said plaintiff., the note of Gabriel J. Johnston for $ and the note of John T. Gray, for the sum of in full satisfaction for and on account of all damages to which plaintiff' was or might be entitled for having failed to collect the notes in the declaration mentioned, and that in pursuance of said accord, he did then and there deliver said notes in full satisfaction for the failure to collect them as aforesaid, and he then and there received them.”

There was another special pléa filed previous to this; but it was demured to, and overruled on demurrer, and as it was rightly disposed of and involves no new question, we shall not notice it.

To the special plea which we have recited, the relator of the plaintiff replied:

“ihat he ought not to be barred because he says that the defendant Miller, (formerly his guardian,) having in his possession the notes in the plea alluded to, requested him, the relator, to receive said notes and carry them to New-Castle, where said Gabriel J. Johnston then resided, and to present them to said Gabriel J. Johnson, for payment, and if he did not pay the same, then to return them to the defendant Miller, and avers that he received said notes for the purpose of presenting them as aforesaid, to said Gabriel J. Johnston, and did so present them; but said Gabriel J. Johnston refused and failed to pay them or any part thereof, and that afterward?[207]*207lie returned said notes to said defendant Miller, who received and still holds them,.”
Rejoinder of defendants, Issue. Evidence on the trial, on plaintiff’s part,

To this replication the defendant rejoined;

“That the defendant Miller did not request plaintiff to receive said notes and carry them to Newcastle, where said Gabriel J. Johnston resided, and present them to him for payment, and if he did not pay them to return them to said Miller, and he denies ;plaintiff received them for said purpose, and that afterwards plaintiff returned said notes, and that he received them and yet has them,”

This rejoinder concluded to the country, and the plaintiff filed a similiter, and a jury was sworn to try the issues.

On the trial it appeared that the defendant Miller became guardian for the relator of the plaintiff, in May, 1817, and then executed bond, on which this suit is brought, and the relator left the State shortly afterwards, and was not in it till his arrival at full age, in July, 1821. That Gabriel J. Johnston was owing about $647 50, and to secure the same, he executed his note to the guardian, in July, 1817, payable four months after date, for $520 50, and for the payment of the remaining $127 60, passed to plaintiff, by delivery without assignment, the note of John T. Gray, executed to said Gabriel J. Johnston, but that said note of Gray was paid to said Gabriel J. Johnston by Gray, before its delivery to the guardian in security for the debt due to his ward; that in 181.9, a common friend of the parties apprized the guardian, of his own mere motion, that Gabriel J. .Johnston was embarrassed and was about to make oyer and convey away all his property, and urged the guardian to pursue him speedily, and secure the debts clue to him as guardian for plaintiff, which he, the guardian, promised to do; that Gabriel J. Johnston failed in the latter part of the year 1819, and large sums of money were made out of his estate, by execution, during the year 1820; that the defendant, the former guardian, had, long before this suit was brought, held and still holds the said notes of Gabriel J. Johnston and Gray, on which no efforts to collect the money appears to have been made.

Dolbiul ant’s ¡¿yidencu. instructions ol' the circuit . curt. Yordigi for dpfofenclanf; motion for new trial overruled and -exception.

[208]*208To rebui this, the defendant proved that the relator of the plaintiff, to whose estate the debt was due, was the brother of the said Gabriel J. Johnston, and while an infant, had requested his said guardian not to sup the said Gabriel J. Johnston for the aforesaid debt; and that after his coming of age, in July, 1821, he had shewed kindness to the said Gabriel J. Johnston in his distresses, by turning a tenant of bis out of doors, and permitting the said Gabriel J. Johnston to reside in the house, and had also lent the said Gabriel J. Johnston some money. The defendant further gave in evidence the following receipt of the relator of the plaintiff, dated SOti), of August, 1823.

‘‘Received of Isaac Miller, JohnT. Gray’s obligar tion to Gabriel J. Johnston, for one hundred and twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents, due November, 1817, also Gabriel I. Johnston’s note for five hundred and twenty dollars, bearing dat<e the 16th of July, 1817, due in four months, which were deliver* ed to said Miller as guardian for me, by Gabriel J. Johnston, (Signed,) T. I. Johnston,”

The remaining evidence in the cause, consists of the declarations of the parties, and is introduced as an attempt to explain pro, and con. for what purpose this receipt was given, and how the notes after the date of this receipt., got back into the hands of the guardian. The relator seemed by these declarations, to be under some apprehensions that this receipt might bar his recovery against his gugtrdifm, and to show some anxiety to get the notes back in his possession. The court below, on tbe application of the defendants, instructed the jury, that unless they should believe from the evidence, that the said notes of Gabriel J. Johnston and John T.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Ky. 205, 5 T.B. Mon. 205, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-ex-rel-johnston-v-miller-kyctapp-1827.