Rockfeller v. Donnelly

8 Cow. 623
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 15, 1826
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 8 Cow. 623 (Rockfeller v. Donnelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rockfeller v. Donnelly, 8 Cow. 623 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1826).

Opinion

Jones, Chancellor.

This was an action of debt in the common pleas of Columbia county, on the bond executed by John Donnelly, the reputed father of an illegitimate child, and the defendant and others as his sureties, to the overseers of the poor of the town of Clermont, in the county of Columbia, with condition to save, defend and keep harmless and indemnify, as well the overseers and their successors for the time being, as also all and every other the inhabitants of the town, of, from and against all costs, charges, taxes, rates, assessments, damages or expenses, for or by reason of the birth, education and maintenance of the child, or in any wise relating thereto; and of and from all actions, suits, troubles, damages and demands, touching or concerning the. same.

Nature and action Mom9

, Two breaches of the condition were assigned 5 but they were in substance the same, differing only in form. The substance of them was, that the defendant, or the other obligors, did not save harmless and keep indemnified the overseers of the poor and the inhabitants of the town, according to the condition of the bond; and that by reason *thereof, the plaintiffs were forced and obliged to lay out and expend, and did necessarily lay out and expend divers large sums of money, to wit, two several sums of $100, in and about the birth, education and maintenance of the child. On an order for a bill of particulars of the covenants broken and money paid in the premises, the plaintiffs specified the covenants to save harmless, &c., as the covenants broken, and the sum of $16 in and about the birth of the child, and $75 in and about the maintenance, &c., as the sums paid. ,

Breaches,

T).11 , .. eulara.

The defendants then pleaded three pleas: 1st. That the plaintiffs were not forced or obliged to expend the several sums of $100, specified in the assignment of breaches in [625]*625their declaration, and that the inhabitants were not damnified by reason, or on account of the birth, education or maintenance of the child; 2d. Payment of the said sever. ral sums of 3d. That the defendant did well and sufficiently defend, save harmless and indemnify the overseers and the inhabitants of the town, from and against the charge.

[624]*624Flees.

[625]*625On the trial, the plaintiffs gave in evidence the bond' on which the suit was brought, and an order made by two justices of the.peace for Columbia county, after the birth of the bastard child, whereby the putative father .was ordered to pay to the overseers of the poor, the sum of $16, for and towards the lying-in expenses, and the maintenance of the child to the time of making the order, and the sum of 50 cents weekly and every week, from the day of the date of the order, towards the keeping, sustenance and maintenance of the child, so long as such child should be chargeable to the town, and on which order various sums had been paid, which were indorsed upon it. They then called a witness, who testified that the child was then living and was chargeable to the town of .Clermont, and rested the cause. The counsel for the defendant insisted that the plaintiffs were bound to show the actual expenditure of the money they demanded, and that the order of bastardy was not competent evidence in the cause, nor sufficient to entitle him to recover; but the court of common *pleas overruled the objection, and decided that the order was admissible, and that the plaintiffs were entitled to a verdict for the amount due upon it for the maintenance of the child, at the rate of fifty cents per week, from the date of the order to the commencement of the suit, after deducting the payments, and that proof of the actual expenditure of the money by the overseers of the poor for the support of the child, was not necessary. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, and assessed the damages at $50 61, for which the court gave judgment.

Evidence.

Objections: Actual expenditure should be shown.

Order of filiation, &c., not competent evidence.

Overruled.

Verdict and judgment in C. pleas.

A bill of exceptions was taken to the opinion and charge of the court, and brought by writ of error before the supreme court for review; "and majority of the judges of [626]*626that court reversed the judgment of the .court of comm an „ . . m, pleas, and ordered a venire famas de novo to issue. I supreme court put their judgment of reversal upon the ground that the bond was strictly a bond of indemnity, and nothing more, and that the plaintiffs were bound to show a damnification by the actual expenditure and payment of the money for which they sued. The chief jus tice held that the order had nothing to do with the suit, and was improperly admitted, and Mrt Justice Sutherland inclined to the same opinion; but said that if properly received, it did not vary the case ; that if the expenditure of money had been proved, the order might have been evidence to show that the sum was reasonable and just, but for that purpose ,,only. Mr. Justice Woodworth, who dissented from the opinion of the court, held that the plaintiff was entitled to recover upon the bond, what was necessary for the support of the child, whether the advance was shown to have been actually made or not, and that the order of bastardy was properly admitted. He held it an adjudication upon the subject matter, and conclusive until reversed, upon the sureties as well as the putative father; and that it fixed the extent of the defendant^ liability.

[625]*625Exceptions.

[626]*626Reversal,

^ ¿ 0f re. versai.

The leading question is, whether the pkhitiits were bound to prove the actual expenditure of the money for which they sued, in the support, education or maintenance of the child, to enable them to sustain the suit against the ^surety upon the bond, or whether the liability of the putative father to pay for the maintenance of his illegitimate offspring, with the proof that such offspring was chargeable to the town, and the bond to idemnify the town. against the charge, were sufficient to sustain the action, and the order of the two justices in the premises competent evidence in the cause, and sufficient proof to establish the amount which they were entitled to recover.

Leading ques*^al Jkould diture have been shown?

The statute under which the bond was taken, makes provision for the relief of towns from the maintenance of bas-' tard children, when they become chargeable to the town; and superadds a cautionary remedy, by requiring security from the putative father before the birth of the child. By [627]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Cow. 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rockfeller-v-donnelly-nycterr-1826.