Leggett v. Humphreys

62 U.S. 66, 16 L. Ed. 50, 21 How. 66, 1858 U.S. LEXIS 622
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 18, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 62 U.S. 66 (Leggett v. Humphreys) 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
Leggett v. Humphreys, 62 U.S. 66, 16 L. Ed. 50, 21 How. 66, 1858 U.S. LEXIS 622 (1859).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court.

The controversy between these parties, although.in its progress it has- been much complicated and- involved, yet, as to the principle by which its true character is defined, and by which its decision should be controlled, is simple enough. That principle is the extent of the pecuniary, responsibility sustained by the surety in an official bond for the conduct of ' his principal.

To a correct comprehension of the position of the parties to •this cause, some length of detail as to the facts and pleadings ' it contains, is necessary. '

The appellee, together with one Grissom, having in the year 1887 bound himself in the penalty of f15,000, as surety to the official bond of Richard J. Bland, sheriff of Claiborne county, in the State of Mississippi,, a suit was instituted in the name .of the Govérnor of the State upon, that bond, for the use of .the .appellants, in the Circuit-Court of the United States for the southern district of Mississippi, charging a breach of the’ condition of that bond by Bland, in having released from jail one McNider, against.whom the appellants .had, recovered a judgment in thé Circuit Court aforesaid, and whom, after being charged in exécution in that court, the marshal had committed *70 to the custody of Bland, the sheriff. Under certain provisions of the statutes of Mississippi, it was pleaded in’defence to this action, that McNider being insolvent and unable to pay his prisbn fees, the appellants, who were non-residents, had failed to pay those fees, or,.as required by the law of the State, to give security for their payment, or to appoint an agent within the county on whom demand for the prison fees could be made; and that, in consequence of such failure, McNider had, by a regular judicial order, been discharged from jail as an insolvent debtor. Upon a demurrer to the plaintiff’s replications to. these pleas,- the Circuit Court gave judgment with costs in favor of the sheriff and the appellee, Humphreys, the suit haying been previously discontinued as to the other surety, Grissom. This judgment was upon a writ of error reversed by this court, and the cause was remanded to the Circuit Court with instructions (Bland, the sheriff, pending the cause hére, having, died) to enter , a judgment against the appellee, as surety, for the sum of $3,910.78, besides the costs. (Vid. McNutt v. Bland et al., 2 Howard, 28.) In the interval between the emanation of the writ of error and, the reversal of the judgment of the Circuit' Court, two judgments were, on motion, obtained' in the State court against the sheriff and Humphreys as his surety, by the Planters’ Bank pf Mississippi, one for the sum of $12,325.22, and the other for $2,674.75, making‘an aggregate amount exceeding the penalty of the bond in which the appellee was surety; and the property of that surety was levied upon and sold under execution, and the proceeds applied in full satisfaction of the amount of the.penalty. Upon the’ receipt in the Circuit Court of the mandate c>f this con rt, the appellee as surety as aforesaid, moved the Circuit Court for lea vé to plead puis darrein continuance, the judgments, levy, and satisfaction above mentioned, in fulfilment of his bond and of his liability for the sheriff; but the Circuit 'Court refused leave to plead these facts in discharge of satisfaction of the penalty, and, in literal obedience to the mandate of this pourt, rendered judgment against the appellee, as surety for the sum hereinbefore inentionéd. The appellee, Humphreys, then exhibited his bill on the equity side of the Circuit Comt, alleging, the aforegoing *71 facts, and averring, moreover, that no notice or process of any kind had ever been served upon him in the suit of McNutt v. Bland et al., but that the return of the officer of service as to , the appellee was absolutely false. Upon these allegations, ah injunctions the judgment at law was granted.by the Circuit Court, but subsequently, upon a demurrer to the bill by the appellants, the injunction was dissolved and the bill dismissed. From this decree of dismission an appeal was taken to this court, who, after a hearing, expressed the following conclusions, viz:

“In the case before us, the surety had been compelled to pay the whole amount of his bond by process from the State courts before the present defendants obtained their judgment against him, but after the. institution of their suit. This would -have been a good defence to the action, if pleaded puis darrein con- tinuance, The complainant' tendered, his plea at the prbper time, and was refused the benefit of it-, not because it was' adjudged insufficient as a defence, but because the court consid-"* ered they had no discretion to. allow it,- The mandate from this court was probably made without reference to the possible - consequences which might flow from it. At all events, it operated. unjustly by precluding the plaintiff from an opportunity' of making a just and legal .defen.ee to the action. The pay-' ,- ment was -made whilst the cause was pending here. The party was guilty of noiacA&sibut lost the benefit of his defence by an accident oyer which he had no control.- He is therefore in -the same condition as if the ;defence .bad arisen after judgment, .which- would entitle him to relief by audita, querela, or bill in equity. "We-are therefore of the'opinion', that the complainant was entitled to the relief prayed fpr in'the bill, and that the. decree of the court below should be reversed.”.

The cause was thereupon remanded, to the Circuit Court for further proceedings to bé had therein, in conformity with the above opinion. (Vid. 9 How., 313, 314, Humphreys v. Leggett et al.) On the filing of the mandate in this latter case, the defendants (the present appellants) being ruled by the Circuit Court to answer, the bill for the inju notion, admit by their answer the recovery of their judgment against Humphreys as *72 surety for Bland. They acknowledge their belief of the judgments in the State court against the sheriff and,his surety, and ithe levy, tinder those judgments, and the. return of satisiaetion upon the -executions by the proper officer, but allege that the judgments were fraudulently suffered in order to defeat the. appellants; that no money was paid Under the pretended sale, and- that the property Was retained by Humphreys.. In an amended answer, filed by leave of the court, the appellant's allege that Bland, the sheriff, had transferred the judgments in the State court, for. $10,524,’ to Humphreys, who, under that assignment, had received the'sum of $18,000; that he had not, discharged the.penalty of the.sheriff’s-bond, and from various soúrces had received funds exceeding all his liabilities’ arising ■ therefrom.- Subsequently, viz: in 1851, the. appellants, by’a cross bilj against the appellee, charged that Biand, to indemnify the appellée as surety in thé bond of 1837, had assigned certain debts and other subjects-of property, real and personal, to aft amount more, than equal to the penalty of that bon'd, that among these subjects were the fee bills due to Bland, as sheriff, to .a large amount; and also the judgments, set forth ip the original bill as having been recovered in the State courts; and that these judgment^had!been discharged by Humphreys by notes purchased by him at the depreciation of fifty cents in the, dollar. .

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Bluebook (online)
62 U.S. 66, 16 L. Ed. 50, 21 How. 66, 1858 U.S. LEXIS 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leggett-v-humphreys-scotus-1859.