Hoffman v. Bircher

22 W. Va. 537, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 79
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 22 W. Va. 537 (Hoffman v. Bircher) 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
Hoffman v. Bircher, 22 W. Va. 537, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 79 (W. Va. 1883).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

The plaintiff in error insists, that the county court erred, in overruling his demurrer to the declaration; in rejecting the plea in abatement; in setting aside said judgment of non-suit, and permitting the plaintiff below, to file his amended declaration; “ar.d that the circuit court erred in rendering a separate judgment against him; the action being joint there could not be a separate recovery or judgment in this suit, both defendants being alive, and process .executed upon both of them; and also in rendering any judgment against him.”

The plea in abatement was fatally defective, because it did not state what the proper name of Saffell was, so as to give the plaintiff a better writ; and also because there was in fact no variance between the summons and the declaration, [541]*541the names Saf'ell and Saffle being idem sonans; it was therefore properly rejected. There was no, such defect in the plaintiff’s declaration, as to prevent the court from rendering-judgment thereon, 'according to the very right of the case, and the demurrer thereto was properly overruled. But the supposed defect became immaterial, when the amended declaration was filed, to which ho objection was ever made. Neither did the court err in setting aside the judgment of non-suit. The motion was made, and the order entered at the same term at which the judgment of non-suit was entered, the record was in the breast of the coui-t. The motion was addressed to the discretion of the court, and in the absence of anything to show that such discretion was wu-ongfully exercised, to the injury of the plaintiff in error, this Court must presume it was properly exercised; and the same is true also, as to the leave given to file the amended declaration.

It will be observed that when the action was tried as to the defendant Safiell, he was present by his counsel, and waived his right to a trial of the issue by a jury and submitted the whole case to the judgment of the court. The declaration wras upon a joint and several single bill, and the only issue in the case was upon the joint plea of mi debent, and therefore no evidence could properly have been introduced to show that either of the defendants did not originally owe the debt. The plea seems to have been treated as a plea of payment, and therefore the evidence as to this defence necessarily went to the whole ground of the action against both of the defendants, no evidence could properly have been received to show that the action was barred as to'the defendant Saffell, by any defence personal to himself. The case presented by- the record, is simply one where the plaintiff has brought his joint action against joint obligors, in a joint and several obligation, where no defence merely personal to either of the defendants is attempted to bo set up, duly matured for trial as to both, wdherein one of the defendants, at a term of the court when the case -was ready for trial, as to both, acknowledged the plaintiff’s action for part of his demand, and a sepiaráte judgment therefor was rendered against-such defendant which was accepted by the plaintiff; and where at a subsequent term, upon a trial of the issue as to the 'other de-[542]*542fondant, a separate judgment for the same amount was rendered against him, without objection made in that court, at that time or afterwards. ' Did the court err in rendering said judgments or either of them ? ,

The plaintiff in error insists that the court 'erred in rendering the last separate judgment, and that if any judgment at all could have been rendered against the last defendant, it ought to have been a joint judgment against both defendants.

It is a well established rule of the common law, that the plaintiff upon a joint contract, must sue all the joint contractors,'and bring all of them before the court, and mature his cause against all, or if any could not be brought before the court he must proceed to outlawry against such defendants before he could obtain a judgment against any of them; and that he must recover a joint judgment against all the defendants, except such as may be discharged from liability by a defence personal to themselves, such as infancy, bankruptcy or any other matters which do not go to the foundation -of the action, or against none of them; and this result followed in every joint action, whether brought upon a joint, or upon a joint and several obligation, for the plaintiff having-elected to tr'eat it as joint, he took his joint remedy subject to all the incidents of a joint contract. Taylor v. Beck, 3 Rand. 316 ; Baber v. Coock, 11 Leigh 606 ; Peasly v. Boatwright, 2 Leigh 196; Jenkins v. Hunt’s Com’rs, 2 Rand. 446; Early v. Clarkson’s Adm’r, 7 Leigh 7.

It is a rule equally well settled that where the contract was several, and not joint, each of the persons severally bound, could be sued separately; and so where the contract was several as well as joint, the plaintiff was at liberty to treat it as a several contract, and in 'that case also, he could sue the parties so bound severally, and in both cases, recover against them separate judgments. And this course upon a joint and several contract was preferable to a joint action against all for if one of the joint obligors died before' suit brought or during the action or after judgment, all remedy at law, against the estate of the decedent was lost, and the legal remedy for the recovery of the demand could only proceed against the surviving obligors, or the administrator of the last survivor. Therefore where the contract is joint and several, [543]*543and the debt considerable in amount, it is most advisable to proceed separately, so. that the creditor may thereby retain all his legal remedies against each, in case of the death of one or more of the parties. 1 Ch. PI. p. 51; Bac. Abr. title “Obligation” 1). 4; Enys v. Donnithorn, 2 Bur. 1190. But'as the case under consideration was a joint - action,- shown by the declaration to be brought upon a joint and several single bill, with process executed on both defendants, and ready for trial as to both, at the time the- defendant Bircher confessed the judgment, “which was accepted by the defendant,”, what is the effect of such confession of judgment, at the common law, and under our statute, on the right of the plaintiff to further pursue the defendant Safifell at a subsequent term of said court? Some of the questions presented by the record in this case, were considered by this Court in the case of Snyder v. Snyder, reported in 9 W. Va. 415. In that case the plaintiff brought an action of debt, against two joint obligors, served process on both, who appeared generally to the action and pleaded to issue, but before trial one of the defendants appeared in open court, and confessed a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for one thousand one hundred and eight dollars and thirty-three cents, and costs, and the same was entered as a separate judgment. At the same term and on the same day the issue in said action was tried as to the other defendant, and the jury returned a verdict against him for one thousand one hundred and two dollars, and he thereupon moved the court to set aside said verdict, which motion was continued until the next term when the same was overruled. He then moved to arrest, the judgment, which motion was also overruled,'and the court entered a separate judgment against said defendant upon the said verdict.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 W. Va. 537, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-bircher-wva-1883.