Slack v. Heath

1 Abb. Pr. 331, 4 E.D. Smith 95
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMarch 15, 1855
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Abb. Pr. 331 (Slack v. Heath) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slack v. Heath, 1 Abb. Pr. 331, 4 E.D. Smith 95 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1855).

Opinion

Daly, J.

The plaintiff avers that an action was commenced, and that in the course of such action, such proceedings were afterwards had, that the defendants made and delivered to the plaintiff the undertaking which is set forth.

The inspection of the instrument shows that it is the kind of undertaking provided for by the statute, in an action brought to recover the possession of personal property, and I think that the averment in connection with the undertaking indicates, with sufficient certainty, the nature of that action.

The recitals, moreover, in the undertaking, "describe, with all necessary certainty and precision, an action in which the plaintiff claimed the delivery to her of certain personal property, for the delivery of which, in the event of the action being determined in her favor, the defendants became bound ; and I know no good reason, under our present system of pleading, why the recitals in an instrument averred to have been executed by the defendants, should not have the same force and effect in a pleading as a specific averment alleging the truth of that which the defendants have admitted by executing the instrument.

I think it is sacrificing too much to form, to hold that where an instrument is set forth in a pleading embodying certain facts admitted by the execution of the instrument, that they are not to be taken as facts constituting a statement of the cause of a.ction, without a formal averment of their truth.

The real object of a pleading is to apprise the opposite party of thef nature of the claim or of the defence, and where substantially it performs that office, it is all that is required. The present pleading, in my judgment, does so. It could not have [334]*334the effect of misleading the .defendant. The nice discrimination of the counsel who raised the objection upon the trial, may have detected in it a want of that precision and exactness which, before the Code, was deemed essential in setting forth a cause of action, but I think, under the less formal system that now prevails, that it discloses.the nature and causes of the action, with sufficient legal certainty. That it notifies the opposite party sufficiently of the nature of the claim intended to be made, and that to uphold such objections would be in effect to determine that technical certainty in a pleading is as necessary now as it was before, and that the abolition by the Code of all the forms of pleading which had previously existed has been productive of no other result than to leave things precisely where they were.

As my brethren are agreed upon the other points which I ruled at the trial, it is simply necessary, those points having been re-argued, to express my general concurrence.

Ingraham, F. J.

I do not think the case of Shaw v. Tobias, (3 Comst., 188), renders it necessary for us to decide that the complaint in this case is defective. Although the declaration in that case was not deficient in the allegation as to the nature of the action, and therefore not open to the same objections as made in this case, still the remark of the chief justice may be applied to this. He says the bond, as set forth, appears to be a bond within the statute which is a public act of which the court should take notice. (26 Wend., 502.)

In Loomis v. Brown, (16 Barb., 325), the Supreme Court held that in an action on a bond given on the granting of an injunction, it is sufficient to aver that an injunction was granted in a suit, by a justice of the court. The judge says, “ the complaint sets forth the nature of the suit, so far as to say that an injunction was granted in it by a justice of the court, that issues were joined and judgment rendered.” This is a sufficient statement. The judge adds, “if it were not, it is the better opinion, that after parties have obtained an injunction, and stayed their adversaries’ proceedings, and the latter h'aye suffered damage thereby, it is too late for the plaintiff in the' fiyst suit to set up for a defence to the suit on the injunction bond [335]*335a want of jurisdiction to grant the injunction. They are estopped from raising the question.”

The application of these remarks to the present case would sustain the complaint, and under the present system of pleading, when the defect, if it exists, is one which has in no way misled the defendants, they should not be allowed to take the objection.

hi or do I think it necessary to aver that the property was returned. The giving of the undertaking deprived the plaintiff of the right to demand the property from the coroner. It then became immaterial to her what the coroner did with the property, nor was she bound to follow it, and see to its delivery by the coroner. Her remedy against the property ceased, and she was left to the undertaking alone for redress. After the giving of the undertaking, the coroner held the property for the benefit of the defendant in the original action. The plaintiff could no longer interfere with it, and the failure on the part of the coroner to perform his duty does not deprive the plaintiff of a security for property which belonged to her, and which the giving of the undertaking prevented her from claiming from the coroner.

In other respects, I agree with Judge Woodruff. Under the views I have expressed, the judgment should be affirmed.

Woodettff, J.

This action is prosecuted by the plaintiff1, upon an undertaking signed by the defendants, which purports to have been given to the plaintiff, in an action brought by her against Thomas Carnley, sheriff, &c., in which she claimed the delivery to herself of certain personal property, and in which she had caused the same to be taken by the coroner. And after reciting such action, and the taking of the property by the coroner, the instrument declares that for procuring the return of such property to the defendant (Carnley), and in consideration thereof, the defendants herein (Colton & Heath) undertake and become bound to the plaintiff in the sum of one thousand dollars, for the delivery of the said property to the plaintiff, if such delivery shall be adjudged, and for the payment to her of such sum as may for any cause be recovered against the said defendant (Carnley) in that action.

[336]*336In declaring upon this undertaking, the plaintiff avers that she commenced an action in the Supreme Court against Thomas Carnley, and that in the course of such action such proceedings were afterwards had that the present defendants made and delivered to her a certain undertaking in writing, “whereof the following is a copy,” setting forth a copy of the purport above stated, and making profert of the original, and then further avers, that she afterwards recovered in the said Supreme Court judgment in said action against the said Carnley for ten hundred and eleven dollars and fifty-six cents, and that the defendants, though often requested so to do, have not paid the said judgment or any part thereof, but the same remains wholly due and unpaid.

The answer consists of three parts.

First. That the judgment against Carnley is good, and might be collected by an execution against him, but that the plaintiff, by some fraudulent agreement or understanding with Carnley, is by this action endeavoring to collect it from the defendants as his sureties, instead of collecting it from him.

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Related

Loomis v. Brown
16 Barb. 325 (New York Supreme Court, 1853)
Gould v. Warner
3 Wend. 54 (New York Supreme Court, 1829)
Ring v. Gibbs
26 Wend. 502 (New York Supreme Court, 1841)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Abb. Pr. 331, 4 E.D. Smith 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slack-v-heath-nyctcompl-1855.