Goings v. Mills

1 Ark. 11
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1 Ark. 11 (Goings v. Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goings v. Mills, 1 Ark. 11 (Ark. 1837).

Opinion

JIingo, Ch. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action commenced before John Hott, a Justice of the peace, by the plaintiff in error against the defendant, founded on a promissory note for |';30 ¿¡0. The original summons bears date and appears to have been duly executed on the defendant on the lllh day of May, 1835. On the 21st day of May, 1835, that being the return day of the summons, the plaintiff obtained a judgment by default ibr the amount of her said debt and also sixty-eight cents damages and costs of suit. On the 28th day of October, 1835, Milk applied to the Circuit Court of i ulaski county for a mandamus to the Justice of the Peace, requiring him to grant an appeal and to send the proceedings and papers to the Circuit Court. The Court entertained tlic motion and ordered the writ to issue upon the defendant Mills’ entering into bond before the Clerk of said Circuit Court in the sum of one hundred dollars. And on the 22d day of January, 1836, a peremptory mandamus was issued by the Clerk of said Court to the Justice of the Peace, requiring him to grant an appeal and send the proceedings and papers .to ¡me Circuit Court; and the Justice thereupon certified a transcript of the proceedings on his docket and deposited the same together with the original papers in the cause with the Clerk of the Circuit Court; './hereupon the Circuit Court proceed-•h >’•> try and detcmiirie the cause upon its merits mid give a final judgment for the defendant in error, to reverse which this writ of error has been prosecuted, and several errors assigned. The first questions the authoritj'- of the Circuit Court to order an appeal to be granted after the expiration of thirty days after the rendition of the judgment before the justice. The second questions the right of the Circuit Court to take cognizance of and try the cause without an appeal having been prayed from the Justice’s judgment. The third questions the correctness of a decision of the Circuit Court in admitting a receipt of James F. Johnson to be given in evidence on the trial without any proof that he was authorized to receive the money therein mentioned. And the fourth questions the decision of the Circuit Court, that thirty dollars, as received by Johnson after the institution of the suit, was a full payment of the plaintiff’s debt as well as the damages and costs of suit. During the trial in the Circuit Court a bill of exceptions was taken by the plaintiff in, error to the decision of the Court admitting the receipt of Johnson as evidence and deciding that it was sufficient evidence of full payment of the plaintiff’s demand. The receipt as set out in the bill of exceptions is as follows: “ Received of (iMr. James Mills thirty dollars on account of Lucy Goings' suit brought' “before John IIutt, Esquire, on a note of hand for thirty dollars and “fifty cents. JAMES F. JOHNSON,

Constable of Big Rock Township.”

“The above amount is in full for debt and costs of constable, James UF. Johnson, constable.” The bill of exceptions further states that the plaintiff produced the defendant’s note on the trial and that Johnson was at the time of executing said receipt Constable of Big Rock township, in Pulaski county, and that the receipt bears date after the service of the original warrant'on the defendant and before the return day thereof, which is also stated to have been all of the evidence produced on the trial in the Circuit Court. In considering the third and fourth assignments of errors, especially the latter, we have been at a loss to conceive upon what principle the receipt for thirty dollars (if admissible at all as evidence) could have been held by the Circuit Court to be a full payment and satisfaction of the plaintiff’s demand for $30 50, besides the interest accrued thereon, which amounted to about sixty-eight cents, and the costs of suit. Ii is apparent upon the face of the receipt that the amount paid was not equal to the amount of the debt, without costs or interest, and nothing is said as to the Justice’s costs; and it is understood to be a principle well settled tlia1 if a party attempts to plead a payment made after suit commenced in bar of the action, he must show a full payment, not only of the whole debt and interest, but also of all costs accrued in the suit. This is not shown by the receipt in question; and there can be no doubt that the Court erred in deciding that it was sufficient evidence of full payment of the plaintiff’s demand. But the receipt was not, in our judgment, legitimate evidence to prove the payment of the debt. It was given by the Constable after he had served the summons on the defendant and before the return day thereof, and it is not pretended that he had any authority to receive the money except such as was derived from his official character as Constable. In that character he was only authorized to do what the process in his hands commanded him to do; and when he had served and returned the summons his authority was fully executed and determined, until he should receive further process from the Justice. This he had not at the date of his receipt: therefore we consider him as not having had any authority to collect or receive the money at the date of his receipt, and the defendant in making” payment was (as all debtors are) bound to see that the person to whom he made the payment had a sufficient authority to receive it: otherwise the Law considers it as no payment, and obliges him to abide the consequences of his own error, against which every person in the exercise of a prudential care, such as he is by law required to exercise, may he protected by requiring the person to whom the payment is about to be made to produce a sufficient authority to receive it before he parts with his money. In this case it was the duty of the defendant to have seen that Johnson, if he claimed the right lo receive the payment in his official character, had an execution in full life, which alone could authorize him to collect it, or enable him in that character to discharge his liability to the plaintiff: otherwise he should have been required to produce some competent authority from the plaintiff. Therefore we are clearly of the opinion that the Circuit Court erred in admitting the receipt of constable Johnson as evidence of a payment to the plaintiff. Having considered and thus disposed of the third and fourth assignment of errors, it becomes necessary that we should consider also the first and second, to ascertain whether the Circuit Court, under the circumstances of the case, acquired any jurisdiction to try and determine the same upon its merits. This will depend upon the construction to be given to the act of the Legislature of Arkansas, approved November the 3rd. 1831, found in Steele’s Digest, page 374, see 571, see., 57, which provides that in all cases within tho jurisdiction eb a. Justice of the Peace, any person who may think himself o>- homelf aggrieved by the judgment of tho Justice or verdict of the jury, shall have liberty to appeal therefrom, within thirty days sifter the rendition of said judgment, to the next Circuit Court cf the county whore such judgment was rendered ; and the party appealing shall give special bail for the faithful prosecution of his appeal, and that he will pay the costs and condemnation of the Court to which said appeal is taken. By the provisions of this act the right of appeal is given subject to the condition and limitation thereby prescribed. The condition is that the party appealing shall give special bail for the faithful prosecution of his appeal, and that he will pay the costs and condemnation of the Court to which the appeal is taken.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ark. 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goings-v-mills-ark-1837.