Ferrall v. Bradford

2 Fla. 508
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2 Fla. 508 (Ferrall v. Bradford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferrall v. Bradford, 2 Fla. 508 (Fla. 1849).

Opinion

Hawkins, Justice,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

. For the better understanding of the case at bar, the second plea of the defendants, Bradford’s, is set forth at length. “ And for further plea, the defendants, Edward Bradford and Richard H. Bradford, by their attorneys, J. & L. Branch, crave oyer of the said writing obligatory, and it is read to them, &c.; they also crave oyer of the condition of the said writing obligatory, and it is also read to them, in these words : ‘ The condition of the above obligation is such, that whereas the aforesaid Lewis Hale, Michael Ferrell and Thomas M. Crowell, are bound as bail for the said R. H. Crowell, for his appearance at the next Superior Court, to be holden in the county of Halifax, in the State of North Carolina, in a certain suit, wherein •the heirs of William Crowell, deceased, are plaintiffs, and the said Crowell is defendant. Now, if the said R. H. Crowell shall appear at the said court, to be held in October next, and surrender himself in discharge of his bail, or if he shall pay the amount which may ibe recovered against him, then this obligation shall be null and void.’

Witness our hands and seals, this 11th May, 1841.

R. H. CROWELL, [seal.]

EDWARD BRADFORD, [shah.]

RICHARD H. BRADFORD, [seal.]”

[513]*513“ Which being read and heard, the said defendants, Edward Bradford and Richard H. Bradford, say — they became bound to the said plaintiffs, by the writing obligatory in the declaration mentioned, jointly with the defendant, Richard H. Crowell, and not severally; and that the said plaintiffs, notwithstanding the said writing obligatory was the joint obligation of the said Richard H. Crowell, and the said Edward Bradford and Richard H. Bradford, heretofore, to wit": at the Spring Term of the Superior Court of the Middle District of Florida, sitting for the county of Leon, in the year eighteen hundred and forty-three, impleaded the defendant, Richard H. Crowell, one of the joint obligors of said writing obligatory, severally, in a certain action of debt, for detaining and not paying the very same identical debt, and for and in respect of the very same identical causes of action in the said declaration mentioned, and that such proceedings were thereupon had in the said court in that plea ; that afterwards, to wit: on the twenty-filth day of April, Anno Domini, eighteen hundred and forty-three, the said plaintiffs, by the consideration and judgment of the said court, recovered in. the said plea against the said Richard H. Crowell, the sum of thirteen hundred dollars, and one hundred and ninety-four dollars and seventy cents, and their costs about their said suit in that behalf expended; whereof the said Richard H. Crowell was convicted, as by the records and proceedings thereof still remaining in the said Court more fully and at large appears ; which said judgment still remains in full force and effect, not in the least reversed or made void. And this the said defendants, Edward Bradford and Richard H. Bradford, are ready to verify ; wherefore they pray judgment, if the said plaintiffs ought to have or maintain their aforesaid action thereof against them, &c.”

To this plea, the following amended replication was filed : “ And the said plaintiffs, Lewis Hale, Michael Ferrall and Thomas M. Crowell, by their attorneys, as to the said plea of the said defendants, Richard H. Bradford and Edward Bradford, by them secondly above pleaded, say — that they, the said plaintiffs, by reason of any thing by the said defendants in that plea alleged, ought not to be barred from having and maintaining their aforesaid action thereof against them, th„e said defendants, because, they say, that, at the time of the taking of the said judgment, in said plea mentioned, against Richard H. Crowell alone, Joseph B. Brown, the attorney of record, who conducted, prosecuted and managed the suit in which said judgment [514]*514was taken for plaintiffs, was imposed upon, circumvented and his judgment not fairly .exercised, and said attorney was induced to dismiss the proceedings as to the said defendants, Richard H. Bradford and Edward Bradford, and to take a judgment against Richard H. Crowell alone in said plea mentioned, in consequence of the false and fraudulent representations of the defendant, Richard H. Bradford, one of the said defendants, and this they, the said plaintiffs, are ready to verify; wherefore they pray judgment and their damages, •by reason of the non-payment of their debt, to be adjudged to them, &c. &c.”

By the defendants, a demurrer was put in to this replication, and was sustained by the Court.

The plaintiffs in error have assigned the following causes of error :

1. The Court below erred in sustaining the plea of former recovery, pleaded in the second plea of the defendants.

2. The Court erred in sustaining the demurrer to plaintiffs’ replication to said plea of former recovery.

3. The Court erred in not giving judgment for plaintiffs on the defendants’ demurrer to plaintiffs’ replication to said plea of former recovery.

4. The Court erred in deciding the defendants’ plea of former recovery against the said Richard H. Crowell a bar to plaintiffs’ action.

Two questions raised by the pleadings and by this assignment of errors, present themselves for the consideration of the Court.

First. Where there is a joint obligation given by three persons, and judgment is taken only against one, whether that judgment can be pleaded in bar to a subsequent suit upon the same cause of action, by the other parties to the instrument 1

Second. If this plea of judgment recovered is a good bar to the subsequent suit, the next enquiry is, how far its effect can be counteracted and avoided by the false and fraudulent representations of the party setting up this bar; and owing to which, judgment in the original suit was taken against Richard H. Crowell alone, without joining the Bradfords, his co-defendants ?

We will discuss them in their order; and as to the first point, we are clearly of opinion, that a judgment, without satisfaction, recovered against one of two or more joint debtors, is a bar to an action [515]*515against the others. We are aware that there have been conflicting decisions upon this question', but we must decide it upon what we deem principle, and upon the authority of decisions entitled to the greatest respect, not only for the reasoning contained in them, but for their having been made by judges of the highest character and reputation.

If parties enter into a joint obligation, it is certainly to be understood they are to be sued jointly, and not severally. It is part of their bargain, and they have a right to insist upon its fulfilment. In the words of C. J. Spencer, “ Each debtor is bound for the whole, until the debt is paid ; but as regards the remedy to coerce payment, there is a material and settled distinction. If they have undertaken severally to pay, separate suits may .be brought against each; but when their undertaking is joint, unless they waive the advantage, by not interposing a plea in abatement, they must be sued jointly, if in full life, and neither has been discharged, by operation of a bankrupt or insolvent law, or is not liable on the ground of infancy.”— Robertson v. Smith et al., 18 John. R., 477.

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2 Fla. 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferrall-v-bradford-fla-1849.