Rabun ex rel. Taylor v. Fowler

1 Charlton 60
CourtChatham Superior Court, Ga.
DecidedApril 15, 1821
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Charlton 60 (Rabun ex rel. Taylor v. Fowler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Chatham Superior Court, Ga. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rabun ex rel. Taylor v. Fowler, 1 Charlton 60 (Ga. Super. Ct. 1821).

Opinion

28y C'MAKtl/jTi&W, J3uii5ge.

THE facts and circumstances of this case, are substantially these:

Fowler, the defendant, being elected Sheriff of McIntosh county, executed a bond with sureties, (before the Justices of the Inferior Court of that county, which bond in its original shape appears on the minutes of that Court, or some other book in which its proceedings and acts are recorded,) to Peter Early, then Governor of the State of Georgia, for the faithful performance of official duty, and in such terms, as will appear by a reference to the said bond. Whilst discharging the duties of Sheriff,- Taylor, the plaintiff, who sues under the protection of the then Governor of this State, delivered to the Sheriff sundry tax executions to a considerable amount, taking his receipt therefor. The Sheriff, Fowler, failing to collect the sums specified in the executions, or having collected, to pay them over, this action was instituted against him and his sureties on his official bond, executed and recorded before mentioned. On the demise of Peter Early and the subsequent accession to the Government Department, of William Rabun, the action was brought -in his name as “ Governor of Georgia.”

A verdict at this term was rendered for the plaintiff, for the full [61]*61amount of the Sheriff’s receipt to the Tax Collector, with leave given to the defendant’s counsel, to move to set it aside and enter a nonsuit.

Davies and Berrien now support the motion upon these grounds: 1st. That the demise of William Rabun, since the institution of the action, rendered it necessary to substitute by proper process the name and style of the Governor of Georgia, in office after such demise, and in office at the trial of the cause: 2ly. That without this substitution, the action must abate, the physical character and legal style of the Executive Department, as a sole corporation, or analogous to it, not being otherwise preserved, and the style known to the constitution and the law, must be preserved in suits, where it is necessary to be used.

It was urged as illustrative of the objections thus assumed, that in the nature of 'things there could be no material difference in a suit of this character, and one between individuals, A. and B.; and that official actions or suits, brought in the name of a public functionary, were subject and liable to similar principles, incidents and mutations. On the death of a plaintiff, a new party must be made, for the purpose of maintaining consistency in the record. It is equally proper and important, in the present case; for if the judgment is sufficient to be entered up, and execution issued, in the name of William Rabun—Ms physical and official demise being a fact of notoriety, and which this Court is bound to notice ex officio, an absurd and incongruous variation would present itself between the declaration, the verdict, judgment, and execution, falsifying the whole record, particularly in the execution, which could not issue, in the name of William Rabun.

Wayne and Pelot of counsel for the plaintiff contended, that “ William Rabun” might be rejected as surplusage, and then the words “ Governor of Georgia," which immediately follow, complied with all the requisites urged as necessary, on the other [62]*62side. The action might then proceed to its consummation, very legally and properly, in the style of the moral personage, or corporation, lending its aid, as in this instance, to a public officer. It was also added, that it was always usual to take official bonds in the name of the then acting and existing Governor, and not required afterwards, upon his natural and political demise, to amend the writ, according to the matter of fact, at the period of issue and trial. By one of the counsel it was further urged, that the Executive Department as a sole corporation was immortal— something like the perpetuity given to the British King, and therefore there was no rational necessity for the mutations alluded to in the argument of the counsel for the defendants. At all events, the objection of defendant’s counsel, had no connexion with the real merits and substantial justice of the case.

Upon the points involved in this case, I have no local adjudications to direct me, at least they have not been communicated. I must, therefore, decide this motion, upon such lights as a reference to our statutes, and the arguments of counsel have afforded me.

The objections in support of the motion, may be jointly considered ; for, if the name of the Governor in being is a necessary and component part of the legal style, to be used in an action of this nature, the motion must be sustained—there appearing then a radical, incurable variation, between the writ and the bond sued; and besides, all the consequences would follow, in relation to the subsequent record, as mentioned by the defendant’s counsel.

I shall refer first to our constitution and statutes, which have a direct bearing on the points made, and 21y, apply the doctrines and principles of cases, as I find them in English authorities.

Isí. The 11th Sect. of the Constitution of Georgia, Art. III. directs, that “ Sheriffs shall be appointed in such manner as the General Assembly may by law’ direct,” and designates the tenure of office.

[63]*63The Act of the General Assembly appoints Sheriffs through an election of the people. The Judiciary Act of 1799, tit. Sheriff, Sect. 46, declares, “ that before any Sheriff shall enter upon the duty of his appointment, and being commissioned by the Governor, he shall be bound for the faithful performance of his duty by himself and his deputies, before any of the said judges, (meaning by said judges as explained by Act. May 11, 1803, Clayton's Dig. 112, “every Judge of the Superior or a majority of the justices of the Inferior Courts”) to the Governor of the State for the time being, and to his successors in office jointly and severally, with two good and sufficient securities, inhabitants and freeholders of the county, to be approved of by the justices of the Inferior Court or any three of them, in the sum of 20,000 dollars.” There is here no ambiguity. The bond must be taken in the name of the Governor then in being, and is transmitted to his successors, for the benefit of all persons aggrieved by the misfeasances of the Sheriff.

There may be some analogy, between the King’s prerogative of immortality, and that existence given to the Executive Department, by the will of the people, as promulgated in the Constitution. The Governor cannot die, so long as we retain the Executive, as a co-equal, and co-ordinate department of the government, within the limits prescribed by the Constitution. I am not disposed, however, to consider the Executive Department, as a “sole corporation” in the sense and with all the incidents and attributes given to that class of corporations, by the English law. Except the King, who derives his station and powers from any other source perhaps than that of the governed, all other corporations sole or aggregate, (generally speaking) are created by him. In the acceptation of British jurisprudence, the King is a sole corporation, by virtue of hereditary descent, or title to the throne. That title is derived from his race, and dynasty, and with the prerogatives which encompass him, render him something more than [64]*64a co-equal branch of the monarchy.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Charlton 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rabun-ex-rel-taylor-v-fowler-gasuperctchatha-1821.