McCloskey, Bigley & Co. v. Wingfield & Bridges

32 La. Ann. 38
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1880
DocketNo. 7570
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 32 La. Ann. 38 (McCloskey, Bigley & Co. v. Wingfield & Bridges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCloskey, Bigley & Co. v. Wingfield & Bridges, 32 La. Ann. 38 (La. 1880).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Spencer, J.

Plaintiffs, alleging themselves to be a commercial firm composed of Peter G. Bigley & N. J. Bigley, doing business under name and style of McCloskey, Bigley & Co., sued the defendants, Wingfleld & Bridges, another firm, on an account, and attached a lot of coal, mules, carts, etc.

The defendants got an order of release of said attachment, conditioned upon their giving bond with good security, in the sum of $1500. They gave bond, with one Barbot as surety, and the sheriff turned over the property to them, and returned the bond into court. On the day following, the sheriff representing to the court that the defendants had deceived him and furnished an insolvent surety, the court ordered the bond to be canceled and returned to the sheriff, and directed him to reseize the property under the writ of attachment, which was still in his hands. The sheriff thereupon again took possession of the property, and the defendants, without objection on their part, or on that of the plaintiffs, came forward and executed another bond of release with Bush as surety, and the property was again delivered to them.

After filing a motion to dissolve the attachment, the defendants filed their answer. On trial of the rule to dissolve it was sustained, and plaintiffs appealed to this Court, by whose decree the attachment was reinstated. Afterward, on 21st May, 1875, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiffs against the firm of Wingfield & Bridges, and against the partners, in solido, for $976. Defendants appealed, and this court declared the judgment a nullity, because Wingfield had died before its rendition and his representatives had not been made parties. Wingfield died after answer, but before judgment. On returning and filing this decree, plaintiffs caused Mrs. Wingfield, the administratrix of her husband’s estate, to be made party defendant, and she was accordingly cited. The administratrix excepted to the jurisdiction of the court, claiming that the’Second District Court alone had jurisdiction. This was overruled. She filed no further answer, and no default was entered against her. The case was tried again, and resulted in a judgment for' [42]*42plaintiffs against the firm, and against the estate of Wingfield, and against Bridges, in solido, with lien and privilege, etc. No appeal was taken from, this judgment, which was rendered 8th May, 1878. On 15th July, 1878, plaintiffs caused execution to issue on this judgment; and on 21st September, thereafter, the sheriff returned the same, nulla bona, certifying that “after diligent search and inquiry, defendants herein could not be found; was credibly informed that they were non-residents of this city. H. H. Walsh, representing B. Egan, plaintiffs.’ attorney, was unable to give any information as to defendants, and failed to point out property for seizure, and the sheriff could not find any property belonging to the defendants herein,” etc.

On 6th November, thereafter, plaintiffs took this rule against Bush, the surety, to make him liable on the release-bond. The rule was made returnable on the 18th November, and was served on the 8th. On the 16th November, two days before the return-day, Bush filed his answer, setting up numerous defenses, which we will of necessity have to consider at length and in their order:

First. He complains that there were not ten days given him to answer. We have seen that he answered two days before the return-day. Besides, the case was on the return-clay continued till 16th December. He certainty had abundance of time, and suffered no possible injury.

Second. The costs of a previous rule dismissed by plaintiffs have not been paid. Of this there is no proof.

Third. The judgment of plaintiffs against the firm of Wingfield & Bridges, composed of Wingfield, deceased, and Bridges, is null and void, because

1. McCloskey, one of the plaintiffs, was at the date of the institution of the suit, and at date of judgment, dead ; and there existed no such firm as McOloskey, Bigley & Oo.

2. James H. Wingfield was never a .party defendant to the suit, and, therefore, the administratrix of his succession could mot be made a party in his place.

3. No judgment could be rendered against the administratrix until a default was entered, or answer filed by her.

4. Citation of the administratrix of Wingfield does not authorize a judgment against the firm of Wingfield & Bridges, nor against the succession of Wingfield.

In order to substantiate the first above ground of nullity, the defendant annexed to his answer interrogatories to be answered by each and every of the plaintiffs; and the court ordered them to be so answered. Peter G-. Bigley answered before a Louisiana commissioner in [43]*43Memphis, where he then resided. N. J. Bigley did not answer. On the-trial, Bush moved to take the interrogatories for confessed, because one of the plaintiffs had neglected to answer, and because the answers of the other were taken before a Louisiana commissioner, but not under a commission from the court. The judge a quo refused the motion, without assigning of record any reasons. It is manifest that the interrogatories could not be taken for confessed against the plaintiff who did answer. The fact that the oath was taken before a commissioner of this State, but not under a commission from the court, is not, under the Code-of Practice, a ground for taking the interrogatories for confessed. It might be a good ground to refuse them admission in evidence for plaintiff. There is no doubt of the right of defendant to have the answers of both defendants. See 3 M. 503 ; 14 L. 297.

And there is no doubt of his right to have the interrogatories taken as confessed against the party failing to answer, and this without any formal motion, and on the trial. See 7 L. 522 ; 10 L. 713.

The difficulty is in determining the effect of so taking them as against one partner, and not as against the other. We incline to think that under the Code of Practice as it now exists (art. 354), when the answers of one establishes a state of fact different from that implied from the silence of the other, it would be necessary to treat it as we would the conflicting evidence of two plaintiffs sworn as witnesses, and,, therefore, decide according to the weight of evidence.

But we are dispensed from meeting this difficult question in this case. The suit was brought by Peter G-. & N. J. Bigley, as being the persons owning the claim and composing the firm of McCloskey, Bigley & Co. The judgment so recognized them, and decreed them to be entitled to the amount sued for. That judgment, plaintiffs’ counsel correctly maintains, is conclusive on the defendants’ security, because it is conclusive on them. It is clear that the defendants could not set up such a defense, neither can the surety. See Quine vs. Mayes, 2 R. 510 ; Alley vs. Hawthorn, 1 A. 122,126. The surety’s obligation is to satisfy the judgment against his principal. C. P. 259. If that judgment is-good against the principal, the surety cannot dispute its validity.

The question, therefore, whether P. G-. & N. J. Bigley were the rightful holders and owners of the claim sued upon, could not be raised by Bush, and the interrogatories propounded in that regard were immaterial and irrelevant. We will remark, however, that as a matter of fact, there is abundance of evidence in the record, outside of the answers of P. G.

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Bluebook (online)
32 La. Ann. 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccloskey-bigley-co-v-wingfield-bridges-la-1880.