Edward Bradford, in Error v. Robert W. Williams, and John Judge, in Error v. Robert W. Williams

45 U.S. 576, 11 L. Ed. 1109, 4 How. 576, 1846 U.S. LEXIS 415
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 45 U.S. 576 (Edward Bradford, in Error v. Robert W. Williams, and John Judge, in Error v. Robert W. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edward Bradford, in Error v. Robert W. Williams, and John Judge, in Error v. Robert W. Williams, 45 U.S. 576, 11 L. Ed. 1109, 4 How. 576, 1846 U.S. LEXIS 415 (1846).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McLEAN

delivered, the' opinion of the court.

A writ of error having been' allowed in this case, and the record not having been filed by the plaintiff within the forty-third rule, a motion was made by the counsel of the defendant, on presenting a statement of the judgment below, regularly certified, to dock it and dismiss the cause, which the court ordered to be done. And-now a motion is made to set-aside that order, on the ground that■the clerk, who certified the judgment, acted without authority.

The certificate objected to is in the proper form, is signed by R. T. Birchett, clerk of the Court of Appeals of Florida, and is authenticated by the seal of that court.

Florida was admitted into the Union as a State, on the 3d of March last, but provision was made under the seventeenth article in the constitution for the continuance of the courts and officers of the Territory until superseded under the laws of the State. We think the clerk, having possession of the records of the Court of Appeals, has a legal right, under its sanction, to certify its judg *578 merits, and therefore that the order of dismissal cannot be set aside on the above ground. But in consideration of a change of government in the Territory, and the consequent embarrassments and doubts in regard .to this writ of error; and also in consideration that the plaintiff in error, in seven days after the above dismissal, made this motion, and <asked leave to file the record; the court will set aside the former order, and permit the record now to be filed ; on the condition, that, atibe optionofthe defendant, in error, the plaintiff shall submit the case, on printed arguments,- at the present term.

Mr. Wfstcott and Mr. Ingersoll, for the plaintiff in error. These cases are both depending on the same principles. The statement of defendant in error, in his brief of the pleadings, is correct. The notice of the court is, however, asked to the particular form of the cpunts on the bonds sued on. They are described as' the joint and several bonds of Judge, Bradford, and Craig,' and as given to Nuttall, Braden, and Craig.. They are averred to have been indorsed by all the obligees (Nuttall, Braden, and. Craig) to Williams. The plaintiff must recover upon the case made in his declaration, or not at all, in this action.- The fact that Craig, named as obligee in the bonds, is also one of the obligors, is distinctly averred in .defendant’s plea. The plaintiff ’s demurrer admits this fact. The first question, then, arises as to the correctness of. the position assumed by the defendant, that the bonds are nullities, and cannot he sued upon at law by the. obligees or their assignees v. It is a principle of the common law, that no one can bé’ both obligor and obligee in the same bomb He cannot sue himself, and the instrument is a nullity. 1 Plowden, 367, 368 ; Co. Litt. 264, 265 ; Bap. Abr. 156, 157 ; Powell oh Contracts, 438 ; East-man v. Wright, 6 Pick. 321 ; 6 Taunt. 407 ; 1 Tucker’s Comm. 277 ; 2 American Common Law, 412, 414 ; 1 Chitty’s Pleadings, 45 ; 2 Saunders’s Rep, 47, note T ; Roscoe on Bills, 43, 44 ; 2 . Coventry & Hughes’s Dig. 238, art. 9, §7, art. 7, § 12.; Turton v. Benson, 10 Mod. 450 ; Mainwaring v. Newman, &c., 2 Bos. & Pull. 120; Jus v. Armstong, 3 Dev. 286 ; Taylor’s case, ibid. 288 ; Bonner’s case, ibid. 290 ; Shamhour’s case,. 2 Dev. 6 ; Davis v. Somerville, 4 Dev. 382 ; 13 Serg. & Lowb. 328. The court are particularly referred to the North Carolina cases-above cited. Independent of all authority, the common sense of .this principle is so obvious that it cannot be disputed. Delivery, which, with sealing, is an essential part of a bond, cannot be made by a man to *579 bimself, nor can a man sue himself. This objection, therefore, is insuperable, unless it can be evaded.

*578 In conformity with the above order, the case was submitted, upon the following printed arguments, by Mr. Westcott and Mr. C. J. Ingersoll, for the plaintiff in error, and Mr. Thompson, for the defendant.

*579 The counsel for defendant in error, in his submitted brief, does not seem disposed to contest this position, but it is attempted to be évdded by contending that the thirty-third and thirty-fourth sections óf'thé Territorial statute of 1828 (see Duval’s Comp., p. 69, correctly quoted in 2d" page of defendant's brief), alters the common lato on this subject. The common law was adopted in Florida at the first session of the Territorial legislature after the cession. (See Laws of Florida Of 1822, p. 53}. It has continued , in force in, Florida ever since. In 1828, a. revision of the laws was attempted by the legis,lature, and in the enumeration of the acts to be continued in force; the act of 1822, above referred to, was, as is nojoriouá, by mere inadyerteface," omitted. Until it was reenacted in 1829, it was contended by. sonde that during thát interim the civil lato Of Spain, ánd not the common law of England, was to be regarded is existing in that territory) .but such position never received the sanction of any judicial decision. It is submitted that the Common law,once adopted as a system 'in 1822, continued till positively and affirmatively abrogated. A different rule would Occasion greatconfusion and embarrassment as to. contracts rmde hr the. year 1828, made according to the rüles and forms of the common lato, and in thebelief that it controlled them. Yet defendant in error seeks to establish such doctrine. TBe Territorial statute cited “ vests'” the indorsee with the same rights; powers, and capacities as might have been “ possessed hy the assignor .or indorser ; and the assignee or indorsee may bring suit in Ins own ñamé.” (See § 34 of statute cited, p. 2, defendant’s brief, and Duval’s Comp., p. 96.) - This Territorial"statute does not give to the assignee or indorsee Of a bond any more “'rights, ;powets, or capacities*” than “ might have been possessed by the assignor or indorser.” The restrictive words* u- the same,” used in fie law, show such intention by the legislature? Defendant in error cannot sue as indorsee, unless the words “ the saíne ” are construed to--mean more. It would be as reasonable to argue; that the words might have been possessed,”, used in the same elause,. meant fiat fie indorsee of an invalid bond should have the “same rights, powers, and capacities” as his indorsee “ might ” Have had, if the bond had been valid.

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45 U.S. 576, 11 L. Ed. 1109, 4 How. 576, 1846 U.S. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edward-bradford-in-error-v-robert-w-williams-and-john-judge-in-error-scotus-1846.