Inbusch v. Farwell

66 U.S. 566, 17 L. Ed. 188, 1 Black 566, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 513
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 17, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 66 U.S. 566 (Inbusch v. Farwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inbusch v. Farwell, 66 U.S. 566, 17 L. Ed. 188, 1 Black 566, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 513 (1862).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD.

This is a writ of error to the District Court of the United States for the district of Wisconsin; As appears by the transcript, the suit was brought on the nineteenth day of October, 1859, by the present defendant, and the proceedings in the suit show that he had judgment in the court below, and that the original defendants sued out this writ of error. It was an action of debt, upon’a bond signed by one James Buchanan, for and on behalf of himself, Henry Eastman, and Patten McMillan, as principal, and John G. Inbusch and John D. Inbusch, as sureties. Process issued against all-three of the obligors who'signed the bond, but service was not made upon the principal, for the reason that he was out of the jurisdiction of the court. - -

Referring to the recitals of the bond, it will be seen that it was given for the discharge of certain personal property attached”^ *568 by the marshal, and hold by him at the date of the bond, under a process of attachment duly issued by the District Court of the United States for the same district against said 'James Buchanan and the other two individuals, for and on whose behalf he professed to act in executing the instrument. They ■were co-partners in the luiñbering business, under the firm-name and style of Buchanan, Eastman & Company, and in the course of their trade became indebted to Charles B. Farwell, the obligee of the before mentioned bond. He held against their firm two promissory notes, both dated October fifth, 1857, and made payable áfithe Galena Bank, with interest, at the rate of ten per cent. One was for the sumí of two thousand dollars, payable in ninety days from date, and the other was for one thousand dollars, payable in four months, and both were signed in the name of the firm, Both notes being overdue and unpaid, the promisee, on the twelfth day of February, 1858, brought suit against the three partners to recover the amount. When he filed the praecipe he also filed a bond and affidavit for a summons with attachment, and the process duly issued in that form. Pursuant to the command of the precept, the marshal- attached a large quautity of pine lumber belonging to the co-partnership, consisting of pine boards, shingles,-and saw-logs,

■ Proceedings, for the collection of debts in the District Court of the United States for that district are regulated by the laws of the State composing the district, in consequ.euce' of a rule to that effect adopted by the court. Accordingly the marshal made an inventory of-the property attached, .and caused the same to be appraised by two disinterested freeholders of the county.- They appraised the property attached at the sum- of six thousand- four hundred and fifty dollars, as appears by their certificate appended to the return of the marshal. By biq return, it also appears that, on the. sixteenth day. of the same month, he made due service of the process upon Buchanan and MeMillan, two of the partners, by giving to each a certi-fied copy of the process, and also of the inventory made by him of the property attached. All three of the defendants appeared, by attorney, on the first day of March following, *569 and on their motion it was ordered by the court that the property attached be released, and the attachment discharged on the defendants filing a bond, with sureties, to pay the amount as ascertained by the inventory and appraisement. Ten days afterwards the marshal was furnished with a certified copy of the order of the court, and upon the defendants in that suit filing the bond on which the present suit was brought, he released the. property and discharged the attachment-.

Recurring again to the bond, it will be seen that it was framed upon the condition that if the defendants in this suit, “or either of them, will, on demand, pay to the plaintiff in said action the amount of the judgment that may be recovered against the de-fendants in the action, not exceeding the recorded sum, then this obligation to be void; otherwise to be 'and remain in full force and effect.”

Two pleas were filed by the defendants in this suit: First, they alleged that the writing obligatory, on which the suit was brought, was not their deed. Secondly, they alleged, in effect, that the plaintiff in the attachment suit did not recover judgment against the defendants in that suit for any sum whatever, as by the record thereof, now remaining in the court, would more fully appear, and concluded with a verification.

To the second plea the' plaintiff replied, specially setting forth all the proceedings in the attachment suit as already given, and .averring in addition thereto that the defendants appeared in the case on the 24th day of March, 1858, and pleaded to -the jurisdiction, alleging, that at the commencement of the suit they were citizens of the State of Illinois, and not citizens of the State-of Wisconsin, as alleged in the declaration. They also alleged that two of the defendants .afterwards, on the seventeenth day of November, in the same year, made and filed jm the cause a suggestion of the death of the other defendant'; and that on the 10th day of January, .1859, he, the plaintiff, filed a replication to their plea to the jurisdiction of the court, denying the matters therein alleged, and averring that some one or more of the defendants were -citizens of the State of Wisconsin, as was alleged in the declaration. That he, the plaintiff, thereafter, on the eighth. day of April following, by *570 leave of court, entered a discontinuance as to Buchanan and Eastman, because they were out of the jurisdiction, as alleged in their plea; and, that on the twenty-first day of the.same month, the administrator of the deceased defendant, McMillan, appeared as a party defendant in the suit.

These allegations were also accompanied by others, to the effect that the suit was duly revived against the administrator of the deceased partner; that the parties went to -trial on the issue tendered and joined, and that the jury returned their verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and that the cause was then, for the want of a plea in bar of the action, referred to the clerk to compute the damages, and upon his report coming in, judgment was entered for the plaintiff in the sum of three thousand three hundred and seventy dollars and forty cents. "Whereupon the defendants filed a rejoinder, averring that all the facts set forth in their second plea were true, and repeating the denial that the plaintiff ever recovered judgment against the defendants named in the bond. Upon these several matters they tendered an issue to the country, and on that issue the parties went to trial. To maintain the issue on his part, the plaintiff* introduced the bond and a duly certified copy of the record in the attachment suit, and proved that he demanded payment of the. amount before the suit was brought.

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Bluebook (online)
66 U.S. 566, 17 L. Ed. 188, 1 Black 566, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inbusch-v-farwell-scotus-1862.