Hughes ad'r v. Wickliffe & Nourse

50 Ky. 202, 11 B. Mon. 202, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 45
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 14, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 50 Ky. 202 (Hughes ad'r v. Wickliffe & Nourse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hughes ad'r v. Wickliffe & Nourse, 50 Ky. 202, 11 B. Mon. 202, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 45 (Ky. Ct. App. 1850).

Opinion

Judge Graham

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action of covenant brought by Wickliffe and Nourse upon an injunction bond executed to them on tjle 27th Oct. 1819, by Stephen Lee, with Thomas C. Roberts and John Hughes, jr., his securities. Hughes having died, this action was brought against the administrator de bonis non of his estate, and against his heirs. The bond is in the penalty of eight hundred dollars, with a condition under-written setting forth that Lee had obtained an injunction to stay all further proceed[203]*203ings upon a judgment obtained against him and McDonald for the sum of $426 77-j.- cents, with interest from day of June 1819, and 70£ cents costs by Wickliffe and Nourse, and then concludes thus: “Now if the said Stephen Lee shall well and truly pay and satisfy the said Wickliffe and Nourse all sums of money which now are or hereafter may become due upon the judgment aforesaid, and shall also satisfy and pay the condemnation of the Court in case said injunction shall be dissoDed, then this obligation shall be void: otherwise to remain in full force and virtue and law.” The declaration alleges a dissolution of the injunction and non-payment of the debt, interest and costs, of the judgment enjoined. At the October term 1847 of the Washington Circuit Court a trial was had and a verdict and judgment rendered for plaintiffs for the sum of $1154 75. Upon a writ of error prosecuted to this Court, the judgment was in September 1848, reversed and remanded for a new trial. It is not necessary to state the errors then found in the record. When the case was again docketted in the Circuit Court, the de-' fendants filed pleas 1,-2» 3r4 and 5. Upon the 1st'and 5th, issue was taken, and demurrers sustained to the others. A sixth plea was then filed, and issue thereon joined by the plaintiffs. A seventh plea was afterwards filed to which the plaintiffs objected, and being overruled, they demurred, and their demurrer was sustained.

Arrest' oí judgment and new trial moved and overruled.

A trial was had upon the issues joined which resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs for the sum of $1317 65 cents in damages. A motion, for arrest of judgment and for a new trial being overruled, the defendants have by writ of error again brought the case to this Court for revision. The errors assigned are 1st, in sustaining demurrers to the pleas; 2d and 3d, in refusing to arrest the judgment and grant a new trial, and 4th the order and judgment are contrary to law and evidence.

A plea to an action on an injnpption bond, averring that at the obtaining the injunction defendant had a perfect equitable right to do so, is not good (6 B. Monroe, 471-2.)

Plea No. 2 merely avers that at the time the said Lee obtained the injunction to the judgment as recited in the bond sued on, he had a perfect equitable right to do so, and the injunction was properly and legally obtained. Waving all other objections to this plea, and admitting that it is intended to present a case of injunction properly awarded, and that the cause for it was subsequently removed, and the injunction then dissolved without damages, as is averred in some of the other pleas, the facts stated constitute no bar to the plaintiffs action. The bond was forfeited if the injunction was dissolved, and by the express stipulations of the condition as decided in 6 B. Monroe, 471-2, the obligors cannot avail themselves of the fact that the party had cause for the obtention of the injunction. Plea No. 3, is but. an extension of No. 2, and for the reasons already given the demurrer to it was properly sustained. Plea No. 4, gives a history of the chancery suit of Lee, the causes he had for praying and obtaining an injunction, &c. But the main matter of defense relied on in the plea is, that by the decree of the Washington Circuit Court in May 1843, his injunction was perpetuated; that afterwards the said Wickliffe and Nourse took the ease to the Court of Appeals by writ of error, and on the 23d June 1845, the said writ of error was dismissed for want of prosecution. There were other defendants to this writ of error beside Lee and Hughes, and the plea avers that on the 24th June 1845, the plaintiffs, and the counsel for others than Lee or their defendants, by agreement made in fraud of the rights of Lee and said defendants and without the knowledge and consent of said Lee and the defendants procured the Coui't to set aside the dismissal and reinstate the case on the docket, the said Lee and said defendants having no counsel in said Court, and he residing at the time out of the State of Kentucky. If the allegations of fraud in setting aside the dismissal, be sufficient thus far, yet the plea stops short of showing that the said Lee and the defendants, did not after the dismissal have [205]*205counsel in the appellate Court, or that their rights were in any manner affected by the reinstating of the case on the docket, or that if the dismissal had not been set ■ aside, there was any cause whatever, why the plaintiffs could not immediately thereafter have sued out another writ of error.

The Court did not err in sustaining a demurrer to this plea, and particularly as all the matters relied ' on, might well have been proved if true, under the 5th plea. The other pleas to which demurrers was sustained, are in substance the same as those disposed of.

The only remaining question in this case ' which is worthy of serious consideration is one by no ’ means free from doubt. The damages assessed by the jury exceed the amount of the penalty of the bond. That excess has arisen out of the very unusual length of time (thirty odd years,) since the date of the judgment enjoined, the debt bearing interest all the time. In an action on the bond, can a sum in damages, exceeding the penalty, be recovered of the obligors ? The authorities on this subject seem to be in conflict.- W.e proceed to investigate the leading cases: 2 Pitman on Principal and Surety, 33, it is said, the sum to which the surety has limited his responsibility, may either -be-expressly specified in the instrument itself, or be implied from the nature of it. If the instrument of suretyship is a bond with a penalty, the risk of the surety will, in general, be limited to the amount of the penalty, notwithstanding the obligation on the part of the surety is indefinite and unlimited. A party standing in the situation of surety, can only be liable on the precise terms of his legal obligation.

The case of Talbot and Buford, decided by this Court in Oct. 1799, was this: James, William, and Henry Buford, executed a bond to Talbot in the penalty of £1000. The bond is dated 23d April 1782. The condition under written was, that the obligors should pay and deliver to Talbot on or before 15th Oct. 1786, five negro slaves of a particular description, and in case of [206]*206failure to deliver the slaves at that time, they were to make Talbot compensation for the delay by a reasonable allowance equal to the hire of such slaves, and also by computing the age of the same as from Oct. 1786. An action of debt was brought on this bond, and judgment was had against the defendants for the £1000, the debt, and also for £332 in damages. Upon appeal this Court decided that damages beyond the penalty might be recovered and-affirmed the judgment. The case of Lowe vs Peers, (4 Burrow 2228,) was, that of a written promise under seal from Peers that he would not marry any person beside Catharine Lowe, and if he did, then he would in three months thereafter pay her £1000.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Ky. 202, 11 B. Mon. 202, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-adr-v-wickliffe-nourse-kyctapp-1850.