May v. Gamble

14 Fla. 467
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 14 Fla. 467 (May v. Gamble) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
May v. Gamble, 14 Fla. 467 (Fla. 1874).

Opinion

EANDALL, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was commenced by an attachment against Sloan as a non-resident, and by service of a summons upon the defendant May. The amount claimed in the affidavit upon which the attachment was issued, was $5,248.20. The penalty of the bond executed upon tbe issuing of tbe attachment was $10,500 and was signed by two sureties, who each made ■oath that he was worth the sum of $5,250 over and above his liabilities #nd the exemptions allowed by law.

The defendant, Sloan, made a motion to dismiss the proceedings and the attachment on the grounds that the bond is insufficient because it does not appear that the sureties áre each worth double the amount of the sum demanded, and therefore the two sureties are only equal to one such as is required by law; and further, that the sum claimed is not actually due as stated in the affidavit.

The motion to dismiss was denied by the court.

As to the first ground of the motion, the insufficiency of the sureties on the bond, it appears that each of the sureties made oath that he was worth the amount of the debt demanded. The judge decided that the bond was good and sufficient, to which the defendant excepted and this ruling is assigned as error.

The law requiring and prescribing the requisites of thebond in such cases is found on page 368 of Thomp. Digest. It requires that the plaintiff “ shall enter into bond with two good and sufficient securities, payable to the defendant, in at least double the debt or sum demanded.” The bond filed in this case was executed in due form and in double the amount of the sum demanded by the plaintiff and two secuties. Each of them made affidavit that he was worth the [482]*482amount due as stated, though the statute does not require' such affidavit to be made or any affidavit.

In this form the bond was approved by the proper officer as sufficient, and in our judgment it was a compliance with all that the law requires. There was no evidence offered to show that the securities were not perfectly good for the requisite amount. The judgment of the officer as to the sufficiency of the securities seems to be the only test provided by the statute to authorize the issuing of the writ, and if the sufficiency of the bond, good upon its face, is attacked,, it should at least be shown that the affieer acted corruptly^ or that he was imposed upon or improperly induced to accept irresponsible or insufficient securities, and this would present an entirely different question. As to the other ground of the defendant’s motion, that the amount claimed is not due as stated in the plaintiff’s affidavit, it will bo disposed of in considering the evidence.

This suit was brought by plaintiff' upon two promissory notes given to him by May and Sloan jointly, and dated July 22, 1869, for thirty-five hundred dollars each, payable respectively on the first of January, 1872, and the first of January, 1873, with interest at eight per cent., payable an-annually, with payments endorsed thereon amountinar to $3,652.89.

The defendants pleaded as follows :

1st. That the notes were paid before suit.

2d. That before action plaintiff received from defendant Sloan, upon a valid agreement between them made Nov. 15, 1872, in lieu and place of the two notes, and in full satisfaction and discharge thereof, two drafts of $1,000 each,, drawn by Sloan & Co. of Savannah, one at 15 days upon Coulter & Co. of Baltimore, and duly accepted by them, and one due 15th of February, 1873, upon A. M. Sloan & Co., and accepted by them ; also three promissory notes, one for $1,957.20, due May 1, 1873, and two for $3,500 each, due February 1, 1874, and February 1, 1875, all drawing [483]*483interest at 8 per cent., payable to plaintiff’s order and secured by a mortgage on lands that day bargained and sold by plaintiff to Sloan.

3d. For an “ equitable defence ” defendants allege that defendant Sloan signed the notes sued on as surety for May, of which plaintiff had knowledge at their date, and that before suit plaintiff entered into a new agreement in regard to the lands in part payment for which the notes were given,, by the terms of which new agreement, May, for a valuable consideration, sold to Sloan his interest in the lands, and the further'consideration that Sloan would assume and pay the balance due to plaintiff; and plaintiff received and accepted Sloan as the purchaser instead of May, and assented to Sloan’s taking possession, and released and discharged May fx’om all liability in regard to the purchase, and accepted in paymeixt axxd satisfaction of the notes sued on, and of other notes given for the purchase of the lands, the notes and drafts mentioned in the second plea and secured by mortgage. That under the new agreement Sloan was to deliver the drafts to plaintiff and place the notes and mortgage in the hands of a depositary to be delivered to plaintiff on his placing with the depositary a deed of the lands to Sloan, and the cancelled notes. That Sloan has complied with his part of the new agTeement to be performed before the delivery of the deed, but plaintiff has failed to deliver the deed and the notes. That Sloan has paid a portion of the purchase money under the new agreement to plaintiff and to defendant'May, and has gone into possession of the lands, and he insists that plaintiff ought not to further prosecute the suit upon the cancelled notes.

The plaintiff replying to the second plea denies that he received the drafts and notes mentioned in satisfaction and discharge of the notes sued on.

To the third plea plaintiff replies denying the allegations therein as to himself, and says that the pretended new agreement was never executed, was without consideration and [484]*484ymckim factum. That the new notes mentioned are not, and never have been in his possession, and are still in possession of Sloan or his agent or attorney.

The cause was tried before the Circuit Court and a jury, at the fall term, 1873, in Jefferson county, and the plaintiff had a verdict for the amount due upon the notes sued upon, assessed at $5,249.43.

The defendants moved for a new trial upon the grounds (generally stated) that the verdict was contrary to law and to evidence, and that the judge misdirected the jury in his charge.

This motion was overruled and judgment rendered against the defendants, from which judgment they appealed to this court.

As appears from the testimony upon the trial of the cause, the notes upon which this suit was brought were the second and third to become due of four notes of equal amounts, given as the joint notes of the defendants May and Sloan to plaintiff, upon the purchase by May from plaintiff of a plantation, and certain stock and implements, for the price of $20,000. A payment of six thousand dollars was made by draft upon Sloan & Co., which draft was paid by them. The contract for the purchase was in writing, dated July 22, 1869, signed and sealed by May and Gamble. As part of the contract, Gamble executed to May a bond conditioned that he would execute to him a deed upon the payment of the draft for $6,000. By an instrument indorsed thereon, signed and sealed by May, he assigned to A. M. Sloan & Co. the bond and gave them full control” of the same on the 27th February, 1871. An admission of parties in writing shows that Sloan became a part owner of the plantation in 1870.

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Fla. 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-gamble-fla-1874.