Kello v. . Maget

18 N.C. 414
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 N.C. 414 (Kello v. . Maget) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kello v. . Maget, 18 N.C. 414 (N.C. 1835).

Opinion

Gaston, Judge,

after stating the case, proceeded : — We have felt some difficulty in the consideration of this cause, on a point which was not discussed nor raised upon the argument. It is, of course, the duty of Courts to carry out into full execution the legislative will, so far as they can collect it. In the act by which the proceedings in this case profess to be regulated, it is declared with sufficient plainness,' that persons who are interested in the various office-bonds which ¡ re taken 1 y th ! Court, and who deem themselves injured by a breach of their conditions, may institute suits in their own name in the form of a petition; that the defendants shall answer to the petitions upon oath; and that finally the Court shall decree such remedy thereon as the nature of the case shall require and the ends of justice may demand. In these respects the method of proceeding seems analogous to that which *419 obtains in our equity jurisprudence. Rut the act also provides, that parol evidence shall be heard, and that' “ the process” shall be in a summary way. We have doubted whether these provisions do not indicate a reference to the common law mode of proceeding. At law, all the allegations of a plaintiff, not answered by the defendant’s plea, are confessed. In equity, the charges not admitted by the answer, are put m issue. Are we to consider the fact, alleged in the petition, of the execution of the guardian-bond by the defendants, confessed or denied ? If the practice at law is to prevail, unquestionably, its execution has not been denied. There is no averment, that the allegation of the petitioners is in this respect untrue. The execution of the bond has not been . . . . . put in issue, the verdict of the jury is irrelevant, and the petitioners have a right to proceed with their case, notwithstanding that verdict. If the equity practice should obtain, the defendant’s answer as to the execution of the bond was manifestly insufficient. He was bound to answer, not only as to his knowledge, but also as to his information and belief. He had no right in conscience to require, that the petitioners should be put to strict proof, or to any proof of an allegation which he believed to be true. If, indeed, he was not only personally ignorant of the matter charged, but had no information to warrant him in forming a belief in respect to it, he might properly have so answered, and then have required that the petitioners should be put to proof thereof. But the regular course, where an answer is evasive or insufficient, is to except to the answer, and compel a full and direct one. Unless this be done, the plaintiff is under the necessity of proving every material averment in his bill which has not been admitted by the defendant, although the same amount of proof is not required, as is indispensable when the averment has been denied. The legislative intention on this point is not clearly seen; but we think it reasonable to infer, and therefore we do so decide, that as the defendant was compelled to make his defence in the form prescribed by the usages of equity, the effect of that defence should be such as by those usages belongs to it, and the trial of the matters put in issue therein should conform thereto.

*420 It was then competent for the Court below to order an issue to ascertain the truth of any matters charged, upon which the conscience of the Court required to be informed. We disapprove of the terms in which the issue submitted to the jury was expressed, if those terms be designed (as from the charge of the Judge it appears they were,) to restrict inquiry to a bond •precisely corresponding with that described in the petition. According to the most rigorous course of equity practice, no more is necessary to be proved of the matter charged, than what makes out the plaintiff’s claim to relief. All the light which the conscience of the Court needed on this part of the matter in controversy, was information whether the defendant’s intestate had executed a bond for the petitioner Mary, as surety for her guardian; and if so, then to what amount the penalty extended. If he had, the claim of the petitioners was precisely the same, whatever might be the names of the justices to whom it was formally made payable. Nor was the exact amount of the penalty material. It was important only to know what sum was certainly covered by it, for that beyond that sum, liability for the guardian’s misconduct did not attach to the defendant’s intestate. As the issues in equity are made up by the Court itself for the satisfaction of the Court, and to be tried before the Court itself, that in question should have been so modified, or the jury so instructed upon it as to enable them to find the truth of what was material only, and not defeat the great purpose of the inquiry, by confining their attention to what was formal and unessential. Perhaps the issue as expressed, did not warrant the part of the charge excepted to, and the relief of the petitioners on account of the injury in this respect sustained, might be to reverse the decree of dismission, and send the cause back for further inquiry, whether any guardian-bond, and if any, what bond given by William E. Daughtry, as guardian for the petitioner Mary, was executed by the defendant’s intestate. But it is unnecessary to decide this matter distinctly, as for other reasons an alias venire must be ordered.

The finding on the issue is conclusive of the particular fact so found, unless the petitioners have just matter of *421 exception, because of the evidence offered and rejected. The issue, though single, embraced several matters of inquiry. That the guardian-bond, if it ever existed, had been destroyed, was not a matter to be controverted, for that was declared by the act of the legislature, and a statute is conclusive as to all public facts which it recites. Rex v. Sutton, 4 Mau. & Selw. 553. But it was to be inquired, first, whether such a bond had ever been given ; secondly, if given, whether the defendant’s intestate was one of the obligors; and finally, what were the contracts or terms of the bond. The appointment of Daughtry as guardian, was admitted in the pleadings, and upon that appointment, a legal presumption arose that he executed a guardian-bond, since such a bond is made a pre-requisite to the appointment. The next inquiry in order, was, whether the defendant’s intestate was a party to the bond. The testimony offered on this part of the controversy, was received by the Judge, and submitted to the jury; but it has here been insisted in argument, that it was so slight, as not to amount to the character of evidence, and to lay no foundation for proving the contents of the bond. We are of opinion, not only that there was evidence of the execution of the bond by the intestate, proper to be submitted to the jury, but evidence, which if believed and not contradicted nor explained away, warranted the finding of the fact. The instrument in question was not a private unauthenticated paper belonging to the petitioners, which had been lost by them, or by those to whom they had intrusted its custody; it was a bond taken under the act for the better care of orphans, and security and management of their estates.

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158 S.E. 698 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1931)
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Bluebook (online)
18 N.C. 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kello-v-maget-nc-1835.