Jarvis v. Sewall

40 Barb. 449, 1863 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 89
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 40 Barb. 449 (Jarvis v. Sewall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jarvis v. Sewall, 40 Barb. 449, 1863 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 89 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1863).

Opinion

Bacon, J.

To appreciate properly the position of these parties, and the questions which arose upon the trial, it will be expedient briefly to recapitulate the facts of the case. They are substantially these: Prior to the year 1847, Terence Smith and Henry G. Smith had prosecuted a suit against Simpson and others, in the court of chancery of Upper Canada. The object of that suit was to enable them to redeem a valuable tract of real estate. They succeeded in the first instance, and a decree in their favor was made by the vice chancellor. From this judgment the defendants Simpson and others apipealed to the executive council or court of appeal in Canada, and by that court the judgment of the vice chancellor was reversed. The Smiths, dissatisfied with this result, prepared to take a further and final appeal to the privy council of Great Britain. To effect this it was necessary to give a bond, and Arnold and Mair became their sureties, in a bond the condition of which was that they should pay all such costs as should be awarded by the privy council to such person or persons as should be entitled to receive the same. As an indemnity to Arnold and Mair for thus becoming sureties for the Smiths, the defendants in this suit executed their bond to said Arnold and Mair. What particular inducement led them to give this bond does not appear, save that they were especially friendly to the Smiths, and believed they had a just claim, and it is probable, as Smith in his testimony [452]*452states, that the expectation of the parties was in case of final success, that-a handsome remuneration was to be made to them. The bond of the defendants recites among -other things that Arnold and Hair became sureties in the appeal bond at the request of the defendants in this suit. The condition of the defendants’ bond was that they should pay to Arnold and Hair, or their assigns, the taxable costs which they might incur, or become, bound to pay, by reason of having executed the appeal bond, and the costs and expenses they might be subjected to in the collection of such costs; and there was a further condition or proviso, that the bond should become void if the Smiths should allow and permit the defendants “to control and compromise” the suit thus pending and about to be appealed, when they should deem it advisable to do so.

The appeal was duly taken and prosecuted before the queen in privy council, and by that tribunal the judgment of the court in Canada was affirmed, and the privy council among other things directed that the appellants should pay to the respondents the sum of £411 11s l0d, for the costs of the appeal, and this was made a part of the judgment of the court. Subsequently to this the bond of Arnold and Hair was prosecuted in the court of common pleas in Canada, and judgment obtained against Arnold and the representatives of-Hair, for the penalty of the said bond. The plaintiff in this action became the assignee of the defendants’ bond of indemnity, and brings this suit, seeking to recover therein the amount for which Arnold and Hair became liable upon the appeal bond, given as hereinbefore mentioned.

■ The answer of the defendants admits the execution of the hand described in the complaint, and that they were informed that the appeal had been dismissed, and that they were requested to, but did not pay the costs, referred to in the complaint, and ignores the remaining allegations therein. They then set up as a substantial defense that they were not per- . mitted to control and compromise the suit when they deemed it advisable to do so, and they aver, that in November, 1848, [453]*453they directed the suit to be discontinued, and so informed Terence Smith, who had the entire management of the same, and were not permitted to control the appeal, and afterwards the same was prosecuted and costs incurred. There is a still further defense to the effect that Arnold and Hair had been secured for their liability by the Smiths, and had received payment for all they had been obliged to pay, but no proof was offered on the trial to sustain this answer, and no further notice need be taken of this defense.

Upon the trial a variety of objections were taken to the plaintiff’s right of recóvery, and the case bristles with exceptions on almost every page. They are creditable to the industry and ingenuity of the defendants’ counsel, but it will not be necessary to consider at length any more than he has deemed it proper to present in his printed points and oral argument. Without arguing he has called our attention, as if he deemed them ^worthy of notice, to three or four objections to the right of recovery, under his fourth point. They may be very briefly disposed of. The first, that it was incumbent on the plaintiff to show affirmatively, that the Sewalls were allowed to control and compromise the suit, was originally urged on the argument of the demurrer, and it is only necessary to affirm the decision then made that this is not a condition precedent, but a proviso or defeasauce, which it devolved upon the defendants to set up by answer (as in fact they have done in this case) and maintain by proof. The judge on the trial rightly held this to be the law of the case.

In regard to the second, that the bond of Arnold and Hair being given in a judicial proceeding, there was no evidence that the law of Canada recognizes such an instrument, it is, I apprehend, enough to say that the bond having been given by the request of the defendants, as is expressly recited in their own bond, they cannot be heard to object either that it is not valid by the law of Canada, or to insist that the plaintiff shall prove its validity. They are estopped from question* ing it.

[454]*454The third objection is answered in part by the same considerations applicable to the second, but seems to be effectually disposed of by the testimony of Terence Smith, that on the appeal to the privy council the appellants gave a bond to the respondents, and that Arnold and Hair were the sureties therein, and that the bond of the defendants was given to Arnold and Hair expressly to indemnify them for becoming such sureties. The last objection under this head is that there is no proof that Arnold and Hair, or their representatives, ever paid any part of the costs incurred on the appeal. ETo such proof was required to be made. The obligation of the defendants’ bond, by its very terms, attached upon the obligees Arnold and Hair, incurring or “becoming bound” to pay the costs, and they became bound upon the affirmance of the judgment from which the appeal was taken, and the judgment for costs therein rendered, and still more was their liability fixed when a judgment for those costs had been obtained against them. So it was held in the decision on the demurrer, and such is the clear -and unquestioned language of the authorities. (See Thomas v. Allen, 1 Hill, 145; Chace v. Hinman, 8 Wend. 452; Gilbert v. Wiman, 1 Comst. 550.)

We will now consider the three more specific and formidable objections, upon which the defendants’ counsel relies to reverse this judgment and obtain a new trial.

I. Upon the trial, in order to prove the decree of the privy council made upon the appeal, the plaintiff offered in evidence and the court received under objection, a sworn copy of a document filed in the office of the registrar of the court of chancery of Canada, at Toronto. The witness who produced it testified that he compared it with the original in the registrar’s office, and that it was a true copy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 Barb. 449, 1863 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jarvis-v-sewall-nysupct-1863.