Rudd v. Hanna

20 Ky. 528, 4 T.B. Mon. 528, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 26, 1827
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Ky. 528 (Rudd v. Hanna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rudd v. Hanna, 20 Ky. 528, 4 T.B. Mon. 528, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 78 (Ky. Ct. App. 1827).

Opinion

Chief Justice Bibb

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

In Oct. 1820, Hanna sued Rudd in covenant, upon an obligation executed to Hanna by Rudd, on the 23d November, 1818, to indemnify Hanna, as the security for Palmer in bonds for keeping the prison bounds, at the suit of various creditors, at whose instance Palmer was then in custody: and upon other covenants in the obligation of Rudd.

The declaration sufficiently sets forth the covenants, the breaches are well assigned, and the declaration contains a good cause of action. Some criticisms were raised against the declaration, which need not be noticed. The decision in the case of McVay &c. vs. Crockett, and the citations there given, sufficiently repel the objections to the breaches assigned.

The defendant Rudd pleaded that the said Palmer, bad broken the bounds before the execution of the covenant sued on, and that the plaintiff know it; to this the plaintiff demurred, and the court sustained the demurrer.

The judgment against this plea was correctly given. The covenant sued, admits that Palmer was then in the bounds at the suit of his creditors, and the doclaration substantially ayers an after breach [529]*529and escape from the prison rules. The plea attempted to contradict and deny the truth of a fact which by the obligation Rudd was estopped to deny. It does not attempt to make a case of fraud to avoid the deed; nor even aver that Rudd was ignorant of the fact; nor does it aver when that previous breach or the bounds was, nor plead it so as to amount to an escape on the part of Palmer, contrary to the condition of the bonds for the prison bounds, in the obligation of Rudd described, in which Hanna stood bound as Palmer’s security. The time is indefinite, and does not apply to these bonds for the prison rules. The plea would be true, although that breach was committed against the condition of other bonds for the rules and before the date of those in which Hanna was bound as Palmer’s surety. The fact as pleaded, can neither avoid the obligation, nor the breaches assigned.

Pleas of covenants performed, and no consideration. If the instrument offered in evidence as that refered to in the writing oligatory declared upon, be identified, it may be read, and its recital will be evidence.

The defendant pleaded, covenants performed, and also that the covenant was executed without any consideration, to these please, the plaintiff replied and took issue to the country.

On the. trial, the plaintiff gave in evidence the bonds executed by Palmer and himself as surety, referred to in the covenant of indemnity, proved the after escape and prison breach by Palmer, and gave, in evidence the records of the suits and judgments had on those bends against Hanna. The defendant Rudd, objected to those bonds, being submitted to the jury as evidence, because the records and judgments on which those prison bounds bonds purported to be founded, were not likewise produced, to verify the authority of the jailor to take them.

The court overruled the objection.

As the plaintiff had identified the bonds produced in evidence as the bonds referred to in the covenant, the defendant had no right to require of the plaintiff, any other or farther proof that those bonds were lawfully held by the jailor, than the covenant itself. The recognition of those bonds in the covenant, the production and identification of them as being those described and referred to in the cove[530]*530nant, was sufficient evidence of their legal effect and binding authority, without the aid of the judgments and executions upon which they had been entered into, by Palmer the principal and Hanna as surety.

The condition of a bond to indemnify the surety in a prison bounds bond, is broken on the departure of the prisoner from the rules, and surety may then pay the creditor without suit and maintain his action. Instructions given by the court, and excepted to by Rudd.

[530]*530The debt due Higgins the creditor, at whose suit Palmer was in custody, and for which Hanna had become responsible by the bond of Palmer and himself as surety for the bounds to Passmore the jailor, was paid by Hanna, without suit, after he became liable by the escape of Palmer. This payment and debt being proved, the evidence thereof was objected to by Rudd; but the court admitted the evidence.

This objection was founded on the hypothesis that a payment without suit, was not a sufficient charge against Rudd by Hanna, unless paid under a compromise, and that compromise for time between six and eighteen months, as specified in the authority in the covenant to make compromises, with an express guarranty, by Rudd to Hanna, in said covenant, that he, Rudd, would meet the payments:— whereas, Higgins’s debt was paid by Hanna, after his liability by Palmer’s escape, and receipted for by Higgins on the 8th Dec. 1818.

The error of the objection, consists in not perceiving that as the bond of indemnity to Hanna, was executed against future responsibilities, in case of Palmer’s breach of the bounds, when such after breach was committed, so that Hanna became liable to suit on the bond for the bounds, and responsible for that debt; he was not of necessity to wait until he was sued, before he paid the debt, in order to claim it under his bond of indemnity. A liability created by the act of Palmer in breaking the news, and the payment by Hanna to Higgins, was proper evidence to charge Rudd on his bond to indemnify Hanna, as settled in Crockett ads. Lewis &c. 3 Bibb, 196.

The defendant excepted to the opinion of the court in these instructions to the jury.

No consideration to an action on a deed, is a good plea under the statute-. -The onus probandi of the issue on such plea, is on the defendant. On the trial of issue on a plea of no consideration the plaintiff shall not prove a transaction after the deed made to maintain it.

[531]*531"That some consideration was necessary to be given to the defendant, by Hanna or Palmer, at the time of executing the covenant, to authorize ry to find for plaintiff, and that the covenant was prima facie evidence of itself of a consideration; if the jury believed from the evidence that there was any consideration given to the defendant at the time of executing said bond, or if they believed that the defendant induced Palmer to break the bounds so as to subject Hanna to some inconvenience, that the law was for the plaintiff. But if they believed from the evidence there was no consideration given for executing said bond, or Rudd did not induce Palmer to break the prison bounds, the law was for the defendant. To which opinion of the court in instructing the jury that the covenant was prima facie evidence against the defendant of a consideration; and that if Rudd induced Palmer to break the hounds after the execution of said covenant, the defendant excepts.”

As early as 1814, in the case of Ralston and Sebastian vs Bullitt, 3 Bibb, 261, the plea of no consideration to an obligation, was judged permissible, under the statute authorizing the defendant by a special plea to impeach or go into the consideration of such bond in the same manner as if said writing had not been sealed.” That decision has been followed in many cases.

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Related

Lewis v. Crockett
6 Ky. 196 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1813)
Johnson's executors v. Deason
6 Ky. 259 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1814)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 Ky. 528, 4 T.B. Mon. 528, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rudd-v-hanna-kyctapp-1827.