Love v. Kidwell

4 Blackf. 553, 1838 Ind. LEXIS 88
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 4 Blackf. 553 (Love v. Kidwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Love v. Kidwell, 4 Blackf. 553, 1838 Ind. LEXIS 88 (Ind. 1838).

Opinion

Dewey, J.

This was an action of debt upon a penal bond. The declaration sets out the condition of the bond, which, after reciting that Kidwell, one of the defendants, had issued a writ of foreign attachment against the plaintiff, stipulates,— that if Kidwell should “ duly prosecute his said writ of foreign attachment against the said Love to final judgment, and pay all damages that might be sustained by him, provided the proceedings should be wrongful and oppressive, then the bond to be void,” &c. The breach assigned is, “Yet the said defendants, although the said Kidwell did then and there sue out such writ of foreign attachment against the said plaintiff as aforesaid, and although his the said Kidwell’s proceedings’ in the said attachment were groundless, illegal, wrongful, and oppressive, by means whereof the said writing obligatory became and is forfeited, and an action hath accrued to the said plaintiff to demand and have of and from the said defendants the sum of, &c. (the debt) above demanded,—have not nor [554]*554has either of them, although often requested so to do, paid the said debt,” &c.

Pleas, 1. Nil debet. 2. The bond w'ás. given withoüt any consideration. 3. No writ of attachment was ever issued. 4. At the time of the commencement of this suit, the proceedings in attachment were undetermined and pending in the Circuit Court.

Issue upon the second plea; and general demurrer, and joinder, to the others. The Court overruled the demurrer, and gave judgment for the defendants:

Nil debet is not a good defence to an action founded on a specialty. The seal implies a consideration, and is; prima fad'd, evidence of a debt; and as this plea does no.t put in issue the execution of such an instrument, it is bad on general demurrer. There is no distinction, as to the validity of this plea, between a single bill and a bond with condition, whatever may be the character of the condition. When the deed is the foundation of the action, although extrinsic facts may be mixed with it, nil debet is not a sufficient plea. 1 Chitt. Pl., Day’s ed. 478.—Atty v. Parish, 1 N. R. 104.—2 Saund. 187, n. 2. When the specialty is but inducement, and matter of fact is the foundation of the action, nil debet is a good plea. It is upon this principle, that this plea is allowable to debt for rent reserved by indenture Of demise; the lease is the indticement, and arrears of rent the gist, of the action. 1 Saund. 38; n. 3. 1 Chitt. Pl. 477. It is, however, observable that the usual mode of declaring practised in these cases, of setting out a demise without stating it to be under seal, (when in fact it is so,) is an exception to a general rule of pleading. 1 N. R. 104

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Bluebook (online)
4 Blackf. 553, 1838 Ind. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/love-v-kidwell-ind-1838.