Harbaugh v. Albertson

1 N.E. 298, 102 Ind. 69, 1885 Ind. LEXIS 12
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1885
DocketNo. 12,123
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1 N.E. 298 (Harbaugh v. Albertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harbaugh v. Albertson, 1 N.E. 298, 102 Ind. 69, 1885 Ind. LEXIS 12 (Ind. 1885).

Opinion

Howe, J.

The only error assigned by the appellants, the plaintiffs below, upon the record of this cause, is the overruling of their demurrer to the second paragraph of appellee’s answer.

It is necessary, we think, to a proper understanding of this case, and of the questions presented therein for decision, that we should first give a summary of the facts stated bv the appellants, in their complaint, as constituting their cause of action against the appellee Albertson and his co-defendant, one George W. Harbaugh.

Appellants alleged that, on July 19th, 1883, in an action [70]*70then pending before Samuel T. Dunham, Esq., a justice of the peace of Jackson township, in Hamilton county, wherein George W. Harbaugh was plaintiff and the appellants herein were defendants, George W. Harbaugh, having filed his affidavit and complaint in replevin, before such justice, also filed therein his bond with appellee Albertson as his surety therein, in substance, as follows:

“ State of Indiana, Hamilton County, ss :
“We, George W. Harbaugh and William Albertson, are bound unto Clarissa Harbaugh and Thomas J. Harbaugh in the penal sum of one hundred dollars, under the conditions following: Whereas, the said George W. Harbaugh has this day filed with Samuel T. Dunham, a justice of tin; peace of Jackson township, Hamilton county, Indiana, a complaint against Clarissa Harbaugh and Thomas J. Harbaugh, for the recovery of one hundred and fifty dozen of wheat in the sheaf, and he is about to take out a writ to replevin the samo: How, if said George W. Harbaugh shall prosecute his complaint to effect, and return said wheat to said Clarissa Harbaugh and Thomas J. ílarbaugh, if judgment of return be awarded them, and pay all damages awarded them in said cause, then this bond shall be void. Witness our hands and seals this.19th day of July, 1883.
“(Signed) G. W. Harbaugh.
“Wm. Albertson.”

And appellants alleged that such bond was then duly approved by such justice, and a writ of replevin was then duly issued to a constable of Jackson township, who, by virtue thereof, seized one hundred and fifty dozen sheaves of appellants’ wheat, in the field and barn, and delivered the same to George W. Harbaugh; that such justice issued process, requiring appellants herein to appear before him, on July 25th, 1883, and answer such complaint in replevin', and such process was duly served on them; that on the day named the parties appeared before such justice, and, on appellants’ application, the venue of the cause was changed from before [71]*71him, and it was duly sent to another justice of the peace of such township, who was competent to try such cause; that before the latter justice, on August 10th, 1883, a trial of such cause was had, resulting in a judgment that George W. Harbaugh was entitled to such wheat; that, within the time .allowed by law, the appellants herein duly appealed from the judgment of such justice to the Hamilton Circuit Court; that, at the November term, 1883, of such circuit court, such proceedings were had in such cause, as that it was dismissed by the court for the want of prosecution.

And the appellants averred that the defendants in this suit had not, nor had either of them, returned such wheat to the .appellants, but that the defendant George W. Harbaugh had threshed such wheat and converted the same to his own use, to appellants’ damage in the sum of $100, which sum the •defendants had not paid, nor offered to pay to the appellants ; that the proceedings in such replevin suit were wrongful and oppressive; and that the grounds of the replevin, alleged in ■the affidavit and complaint therein, were untrue as the-plaintiff in' that suit well knew; by reason of all which appellants were damaged $100. Wherefore, etc.

In the, second paragraph of his separate answer to the fore-going complaint, the appellee Albertson alleged that the bond in suit was invalid and void, for the following reasons, namely: That such bond was executed in a pretended legal proceeding before Samuel T. Dunham, a justice of the peace of Hamilton county, and that all the parties to such proceedings, both plaintiff and defendants, were related to such justice of the peace, within the sixth degree of consanguinity; and such justice attempted to take and approve such bond, notwithstanding the relationship so existing between him, such justice, and the .parties to such pretended suit.

The question for decision in the case may be thus stated: Are the facts alleged in the foregoing answer, and admitted .to be true by the demurrer, sufficient in law to constitute a [72]*72good defence, in appellee’s favor, in bar of the' appellant’s' action? We are of opinion that this question must be decided in the negative. The paragraph of answer proceeds upon the theory that the justice of the peace before whom the action of replevin was commenced, by reason of his relationship by blood to the parties to such suit, had no jurisdiction of the cause, and that the replevin bond, taken and approved by such justice in such cause, was therefore invalid and void. It may be conceded that such justice of the peace,, by reason oí his alleged relationship to the parties to such-action of replevin, had not and could not acquire jurisdiction, of the persons of such parties. Section 1433, R. S. 1881. But it by no means follows from this concession that such-justice did not have full and complete jurisdiction of the subject-matter of such action of replevin, and might not,, therefore, take and approve such replevin bond therein. In the case under consideration, there is no pretence that the justice of the peace, before whom such action of replevinwas commenced, did not have full and complete jurisdiction of the subject-matter of such action. But the surety of the plaintiff, in such replevin suit, who, by commencing such suit before such justice of the peace, had voluntarily submitted his person to the justice’s jurisdiction, now claims in the second paragraph of his answer that the replevin bond, executed by him to enable such plaintiff to obtain possession, as by means thereof he did, of appellants’ sheaves of wheat, is invalid and void and of no binding force upon such surety, because he says that such justice could not, by reason of his relationship within the sixth degree of consanguinity to all the parties to such suit, take and approve such bond. This claim is made by the appellee, as such surety, after the plaintiff in such replevin suit had, by means of the appellee’s execution of the replevin bond now in suit, obtained possession of the appellants’ wheat and had converted such wheat to* his own use.

[73]*73We are of opinion that the appellee can not be permitted to avail himself of such a defence in a court of even-handed justice, to defeat the appellants’ action upon such replevin bond to recover in damages the value of their wheat. The case of Sammons v. Newman, 27 Ind. 508, is an authority in point. That case, like the one under consideration, was an action upon a replevin bond. The defendants claimed in bar of the action that the bond in suit was void, because, at the time it was executed, there was no action pending wherein the execution of the bond was authorized. It was held by this court, that where the plaintiff in replevin has obtained possession of the property under his writ, neither he nor his sureties can be permitted to allege, in defence of an action upon the bond, that no suit was pending when the bond was executed.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.E. 298, 102 Ind. 69, 1885 Ind. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harbaugh-v-albertson-ind-1885.