Hall v. Wadsworth

14 S.E. 4, 35 W. Va. 375, 1891 W. Va. LEXIS 70
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 14 S.E. 4 (Hall v. Wadsworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Wadsworth, 14 S.E. 4, 35 W. Va. 375, 1891 W. Va. LEXIS 70 (W. Va. 1891).

Opinion

ENGLISH, Judge :

On the 6th day of October, 1883, a distress-warrant was issued by A. W. Shinn, a justice of Harrison county, wherein it was recited that S. B. Hall, agent for Jane Hall, his wife, has made oath before said justice that he verily believed that C. G. Wadsworth, her tenant, was justly indebted to her in the sum of four hundred and six dollars, including interest for rent reserved upon contract for a certain messuage and tenement situated in the said county, due and payable in one year; which distress-warrant was levied on the 8th day of October, 1883, upon certain cattle and sheep as the property of said O. G. ’Wadsworth, who on the same day executed a forthcoming bond, with E. E. Pigott as his surety; the obligatory portion of which bond was in the words and figures following:

“Know all men by these presents that we, C. G. Wads-worth and Elam E. Pigott, are held and firmly bound to S. B. Hall, agent of Jane Hall, his wife, in the sum of one thousand and eighty dollars, to the true payment of which we bind ourselves jointly and severally, and each of us bind his heirs; as witness our hand and seals this 8th day of October, 1883;” the condition of which bond recited that “whereas B. E. Harmer, Jr., constable of Harrison county, by virtue of landlord’s warrant or warrant of distress bearing date October 6, 18*83, duly issued by A. W. Shinn, a justice of said county, in favor of S. B. Hall, agent of Jane Hall, and against the above-bound C. G. Wadsworth” etc., continuing in the usual form of a forthcoming bond.

Upon this forthcoming bond an action of debt was brought on the 19th day of February, 1884, against said C. G. Wadsworth and Elam E. Pigott. The defendant craved oyer of the writing obligatory in the plaintiff’s declaration mentioned, and demurred generally to said declaration, and the plaintiff* joined therein, and the defendants also filed a plea in writing in the following words: “Defendants for plea say that at the time of the suing out of the warrant mentioned in the condition of the writing obligatory set out in the plaintiff’s declaration there was no rent due from the defendant, C. G. Wadsworth to the plaintiff, and this the defendants are ready to verify, whereupon they [377]*377pray judgment” etc. On the 30th clay of May, 1884, the demurrer to plaintiff’s declaration was' overruled; and on the 16th day of January, 1885, the plaintiff withdrew his general replication to the defendants’ special plea in writing, and demurred thereto. On the 19th clay of January, the demurrer to said special plea was overruled, and the plaintiff replied generally thereto; and on the 2d day of February, 1888, by agreement a jury was waived, and the matters of law and fact were submitted to the court, which gave judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant C. G. Wadsworth, the surviving defendant, for the sum of fve hundred and fifty one dollars and forty six cents, with interest from that date and costs; to which ruling of the court in rendering said judgment against him the said C. G. Wadsworth excepted, and tendered his bill of exceptions and the same was signed, sealed and made a part of the record of the cause.

From the statement of facts contained in said bill of exceptions it appears that the written agreement between Jane Hall and C G. Wadsworth for the rental of said premises, dated the 28th day of March, 1881, was read in evidence; also said distress warrant, and the return thereon, and said forthcoming bond; and it was admitted by the parties that the amount of rent claimed in the warrant of distress was on the date of said warrant clue and unpaid to Jane Hall, under said lease, but that no rent was due or owing by the defendants, or either of them, to Sanford 33. Hall, otherwise than as above; but that the debt demanded in said action was and is for rent reserved to Jane Hall under said lease dated March 28, 1881, and for no other cause of action, in whole or in part, and from the judgment aforesaid the defendant 0. G. Wadsworth applied for and obtained this writ of error.

The question presented for our consideration in this case is whether the forthcoming bond upon which the action was predicated is good either as a statutory or as a common-law bond. The statute which authorizes the taking of such a bond by a sheriff or other officer is found in section 1 of chapter 142 of the Code, which provides that “the sheriff’ or other officer levying a writ of fieri facias or distress war[378]*378rant may take from the debtor a bond with sufficient security, payable to the creditor in a penalty” etc.; and section 1 of chapter 10 of the Code provides that every bond required by law to be taken or approved by or given before any court, board, or officer shall, unless otherwise provided, be made payable to the state of West Virginia. As to a forthcoming bond taken under a distress-warrant, the statute has “otherwise provided,” to wit, that the bond shall be payable to the creditor. This bond, however, does not comply with' that requirement of the statute, for the reasons that the distress-warrant on its face shows that S. B. Hall was not the creditor of C. G-. Wadsworth, but, on the contrary, shows that said ITall had made oath that he verily believed that C. G. Wadsworth, her tenant, was justly indebted to her (meaning Jane Hall) in the sum of four hundred and six dollars etc.; and again, in the bill of exceptions it appears that it was agreed and admitted that the amount of rent claimed in the warrant of distress was on the date of said warrant due and unpaid to Jane Hall under said lease, but that no rent was due or owing by the defendants, or either of them, to Sanford B. Hall otherwise than as above, but that the debt demanded in said action was and is for the rent reserved to Jane Hall under said lease. This makes it clear that Jane Hall was and is the creditor to whom said bond should have been made payable, and shows that it was intended that such forthcoming bond should be made payable to the creditor.

The sixth section of chapter 142 of the Code provides that, “if any such bond be at any time quashed, the obligee, besides his remedy against the officer, may have execution on his judgment, or issue such distress warrant as would have been lawful if such bond had not been taken.” It is at once apparent that this language would not have been used if it had been intended or contemplated that such bonds should be made payable to any person other than the creditor.

This bond, then, can not be regarded as coming within the plain and positive requirements of the statute, and can not, therefore, be considered good as a statutory bond. Is it such a bond as could be enforced as a common-law bond? [379]*379It does not always follow that a bond taken by an officer which does not conform strictly to the statute in all respects, thong’ll it may be properly considered bad as a statutory bond, must so be considered as a common-law bond; and, upon an examination of the authorities bearing upon the question, a marked distinction will be found between the rulings of the courts in cases where the question is raised by motion for an award of execution upon a forfeited forthcoming bond, and where an action of debt is brought upon the bond against the obligors therein.

In the case of Meze v. Howver, 1 Leigh, 442, a writ of fieri facias was issued in favor of Mays & McClung against Meze, on which writ they endorsed that said execution was for the benefit of Ilowver.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 S.E. 4, 35 W. Va. 375, 1891 W. Va. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-wadsworth-wva-1891.