Moore v. McKinley

60 Iowa 367
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 16, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 60 Iowa 367 (Moore v. McKinley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. McKinley, 60 Iowa 367 (iowa 1882).

Opinion

Adams, J.

„ 1. STATUTE Of aoHonon18: tond^ynegu-s proving1 stay bond' I. The appellants pleaded among other things the statute of limitations. They insist that the evidence shows that the cause of action, if any, accrued ' •' 7 morethan three years prior to the commencement the acbi°n, and is therefore barred. Whether a cause ■ of action accrued to the plaintiff before he paid Sellew, we need not determine. It [369]*369is certain that a cause of action did not accrue to him until a cause of action accrued against him, and if a cause of action did not accrue against him until within three years prior to the commencement of this action, then the cause of action accruing to him is not barred. In Steel do Johnson v. Bryant et al., 49 Iowa, 116, a question arose as to when a cause of action accrued against a clerk of a court for accepting an insufficient stay bond, and it was held that it accrued at the expiration of the stay. The appellants insist that, while it may be true that in that case the court could not properly have held that it accrued sooner, a cause of action in fact accrues when the judgment debtor becomes insolvent, and that the decision in Steel & Johnson v. Bryant can be sustained only upon the ground that it was not shown when the judgment debtor became insolvent. In the case at bar it is shown when the judgment debtor became insolvent, and it is shown that it was more than three years prior to the commencement of the action. But we think the case of Steel di Johnson v. Bryant is decisive of the point in question in the case at bar. This is indicated very clearly by the reasoning upon which the decision is based. Mr.. Justice Servers, in'the opinion, said: “As no right of action against the surety existed until the expiration of one year, we think that none accrued against the clerk for negligence in accepting the bond until that time.” That this reasoning is correct, appears from the feet that it was not certain until the expiration of the stay that the judgment would not be paid at the expiration. The judgment debtor, though having become insolvent during the stay, might be solvent at the expiration, and, though remaining insolvent, he or his surety might pay. the judgment.

Having determined that no cause of action accrues against the clerk until the expiration of the stay, and that no cause of action accrues to the clerk sooner than a cause of action accrues against him, there remains only to be said on this point that the evidence shows that the stay did not expire [370]*370until within three years prior to the commencement of the action, and it follows that the cause of action is not barred.

2. BOND Oí deputy clerk: bodyS$an in bond. . II. The appellants insist that the'bond is not sufficient in form to bind their testate, Rhinehart. The point r made is' that hi s name does not appear in the tody of the bond. But there is something more than Rhinehart’s signature to indicate that he intended to bind himself. The bond is drawn in the plural and recites that “we * * • * * * are held and firmly bound.” This, to our mind, is sufficient.

3. practice : joint'bond: deadfparties:jurisdiclion. III. The appellants contend that they are not liable to the action, because, as against them as executors, the plaintiff a^ best kas a mere claim which, if duly sworn to and filed, would be subject to be allowed as a claim against the estate and dealt with accordingly, . , . . , . . , , and cannot properly be put m judgment. It cannot be denied that the plaintiff’s claim is a claim against the estate. It may be that the plaintiff could have proceeded simply under section 2408 of the Code. But the plaintiff’s claim grows out of a contract in which the defendants’ testate became jointly liable with another, and when a claim arises out of a joint contract, and one of the contractors is dead, an action may be brought against the survivor, and there may be joined with him as defendant the representatives of the deceased. Code, § 2550. This action is brought against La Suer as well as appellants. Possibly the petition should properly be sworn to, but failure to swear to a claim against an estate is not fatal to it. Goodrich v. Conrad, 24 Iowa, 254; Wile v. Wright, 32 Id., 451. The appellants indeed do not rely upon a want of verification. They insist that the claim was not filed against the estate, and that the filing cannot be dispensed with, even where an action, is brought under section 2550 of the Code.

It does not distinctly appear in what court administration is pending, but it seems to be conceded in the appellants’ ar[371]*371gument that it is pending in the Circuit Court of Mahaska county, being the same court in which the action was brought. The filing of the petition in that court against the executors' is, in our opinion, a sufficient filing of the claim against the estate. In McCrary v. Deming, 38 Iowa, 527, Beck, J., said: “Appellants insist that the suit cannot be prosecuted because the claim was not first filed in the court of probate (Circuit Court) and duly sworn to. But the filing of the petition within the time prescribed by law in the Circuit Court is a compliance with the statute requiring the claim to be clearly stated and filed.” 'fhe appellants’ objection as to a want of filing it appears to us is not well taken.

4 bond of approvedeíiy: supervisors. IY. It does not appear that the bond was approved by ^he board of supervisors. The defendants insist that without such approval the bond is void, Whether the bond should have been approved by the board of supervisors, we need not determine. The want of .such approval would not, we think, invalidate the bond. Sheppard v. Collins, 12 Iowa, 570; Garretson v. Reeder, 23 Id., 21; Boone County v. Jones, 54 Id., 699; Skillinger v. Yerder, 12 Wend., 306.

b. statbond: byPdeputyf OTdfsapmty06 of clerk. Y. The evidence shows that at the time of the approval and acceptance of the bond by Le Suer, the plaintiff was not absent nor laboring under any disability. Seetion 767 of the Code provides that ..“in the absence or disability of the principal the deputy shall perform the duties of the principal pertaining to his office.” The appellants contend that the alleged approval and acceptance by La Suer was without authority, and, being such, was not an act for which his surety, Eheinhart, was responisible.

The provision above quoted was designed, we think, rather to devolve upon and make imperative by the deputy clerk the performance of the duties of the clerk, in the absence or disability of the latter, and not to withold from him all power to perform such duties, except in the absence or disability of [372]*372his principal. The construction contended for would render his official acts void, except in the absence or disability of his principal. Such, we think, has not been the construction adopted in practice. To adopt it now-by a judicial decision would manifestly unsettle many and very important interests. This consideration in .a doubtful case may be allowed its influence, as tending to support the construction adopted by us. See Finn & Co. v. Rose, 12 Iowa, 565.

6. ^uyofdep ” VI. It is finally contended that the judgment is not supported by the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
60 Iowa 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-mckinley-iowa-1882.