Sillivant & Thorn v. Reardon

5 Ark. 140
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 5 Ark. 140 (Sillivant & Thorn v. Reardon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sillivant & Thorn v. Reardon, 5 Ark. 140 (Ark. 1843).

Opinion

By the Court,

Paschal, J.

The proceedings in this case are greatly encumbered with useless matter ; and such as an industrious bar, anxious to try every cause upon its merits, should never indulge.

Reardon sued the plaintiffs in error, and Ford, in debt on a 'penal bond, a copy of which is three limes set forth in the proceedings. The original writ was served on the 8th August, 1840, on all the defendants. No objection whatever exists as to the service on Sillivant & Ford. At the appearance term, Reardon obtained leave to amend his declaration, and on his motion an alias writ issued as to all the defendants.

We leave a full history of the case to the patience of the Reporter, and will here proceed to examine the objection raised in regard to the discontinuance as to Ford. For, from the misapprehension of the parties’ rights, arising from this circumstance, has much of the difficulty sprung up. The alias writ dated 23d Jan., 1841, was returned non est as to Ford. But there was another writ dated 29th Maj, 1841, which was served on all the defendants. The defendants at the time protested against entering an appearance, and on their motion the “writ was quashed.” The plaintiff below filed another amended declaration, and sued cut another “alias writ.'" This fourth writ, like the third amended declaration, was to the damage of the plaintiff one dollar; whereas the previous writs and declarations laid the damages at a thousand dollars. We but mention this circumstance to show the great irregularity of the proceedings. This plu-ries writ was executed on Thorn and Sillivant, and a non est returned as to Ford. Thus far the plaintiff had proceeded alone, except so far as the defendants, without entering an appearance, had obtained a quashal of one of the alias writs, for a supposed want of idem sonans in the names of Sillavant and Sillivant.. There certainly was error enough by this time to have reversed the judgment on the score of costs as well as irregularity, if such error be not saved by offering to remit the costs in this Court. But at the September term, 1841, Thorn, Ford and Sillivant appeared and craved oyer of the writing, which was granted by filing the original on the 13th September, 1841. The next day the plaintiff moved to strike the writ issued 29th May, 1841, from the files; which motion was sustained and the writ stricken off. Whether the Court struck off the service of the sheriff on all the defendants does not appear. It would seem however that there was some mistake grew up about this time about the record. For we find in the same order that the suit was discontinued as to Zadoc Ford “not served with process,” and the defendants, Sillivant and Thorn, filed their demurrer to the declaration in the case, to which there was ajoinder, and the demurrer sustained. On inspection of the demurrer we find, that the defendants, Thorn and Sillivant, again craved oyer, and had the bond read to them. They set out the copy in their demurrer; they set forth the special cause of variance, “that the instrument given on oyer is not signed ‘Wm. Sillivant,’ and therefore varies from the supposed writing obligatory described in the plaintiff’s declaration.” As before remarked, the writing is copied into the proceedings three times; and is each time signed Wm. Sillivant. The declaration also avers that it was so signed. As, however, the plaintiff again amended his declaration, and the record does not show in what the amendment was made, of course we are unable to see what defect the amendment cured.

At a subsequent day of the term, Thorn and Sillivant filed their seven joint pleas to the action. The first is a general performance of the covenants. The second specified such performance as to meet the assignment of breaches. The third is a plea of Sillivant and Thom in which they allege an off-set due by the plaintiff to Sillivant, Ford and Thorn, of five hundred dollars, for work and labor, and a like sum for goods, wares, materials, &c., money loaned, interest account and account stated; which said several sums they offered to set off against the plaintiff’s demand of seventy-five dollars, agreed to be paid in said covenant. These pleas were filed the 10th May, 1842. We should not have noticed the history of the pleadings in this place, but that we find a bill of exceptions, filed the 25th of same month, but made to take effect on the 18th, in which there is an oath of one of the counsel, setting forth that' his original appearance was for all the defendants; and that he did not know until after the filing of the pleas, that any discontinuance had been entered as to Ford, that he was constantly in attendance, and that said discontinuance was made without his knowleyge or consent. Upon this affidavit, as well as the affidavit of Sillivant, the defendants offered to file a bill of exceptions to the discontinuance; and such leave having been refused, they excepted to the refusal.

This brings us back to the question of the effect of the discontinuance as to Ford, after being regularly served with the original summons. The plaintiff below never asked to set aside the return of the sheriffon the ground of insufficiency. The sheriffstates that he executed the same (when and where) “by presenting to Tho’s Thorn the within writ, who accepted service of the same, and by reading to William Sillivant and Zadoc Ford.” Without deciding as to the sufficiency of the service^as to Thorn, the service certainly was regular as to Ford. The writ was executed on the 14th August, and was returnable to the first Monday of September, more than fifteen days before the Court. By the 53d sec. chap. 116, Rev. St. p. 627, the writ having been served more than fifteen days and less than thirty days, before the return day thereof, the defendants were bound to appear and enter their plea, &c., and the 8th section of chap. 159, Rev. St. p, 777, declares that, “Whenever any writ or other process issued out of any court of this State, shall not be executed, the clerk of such court, on the application of the party suing out the same, shall issue an alias, pluries, or other proper process, without an order of the Court for that purpose.” If no service had in fact been made, which would have bound the defendants to appear, as if they had been served less than fifteen days, or the service had not been according to law, see Pool vs. Loomis, ante, then the plaintiff might have sued out an alias writ: or, if one of the defendants had not been served, an alias might have been sued out as to such defendant not served. But we know of no right which a plaintiff has to pass over a writ which is sufficient in law, aud which has been regularly served a sufficient time to require a plea, and ask for an alias writ. The filing of an amended declaration gave no such right. The party might waive the demand of the plea, and he had a right to amend his declaration upon such terms as the Court, in the exercise of a sound discretion, should deem to be just. But as the defendants had already had legal notice of the action, they must take notice at their peril of all such amendments.

Having thus shown that Ford was regularly served with process, and was legally bound to answer the action or suffer default, the question again recurs as to the effect of entering a discontinuance as to him in an action founded on a writing obligatory. This question was examined by this Court with a great deal of care in the cases of Frazier et al. vs. The Bank of the State, 4 Ark. Rep. 510; Beebe vs. Real Estate Bank, ib. 552.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ark. 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sillivant-thorn-v-reardon-ark-1843.