State Ex Rel. Jones v. Brown

67 N.C. 475
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 67 N.C. 475 (State Ex Rel. Jones v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Jones v. Brown, 67 N.C. 475 (N.C. 1872).

Opinion

Rodman, J.

This is an action begun on 10th March, 1868, in the name of the State “ on tiie relation of Jones, trustee, to the use of L. B. Eaton, appearing by S. W. Eaton his guardian,” against Ridley Brown and Jacob F. Brown. The writ was returned to Spring Term, 1868, of the Superior Court for Warren county, executed on Jacob Brown, but not on Ridley Brown. At the same Term a nol. pros, was entered as to Ridley Brown, and judgment by default taken against Jacob Brown, with an order of inquiry as to damages, to be executed at next term. The case was transferred to the docket of the new Superior Court in August, 1868; and at Pall Term, 1868, of that Court, the case is continued to Spring Term, 1860, when the bankruptcy of Ridley Brown is suggested; a nol.pros, is entered as to him for the second timo; and Jacob F. Brown pleads “general issue, (execution of bond admitted)payment, release, accord and satisfaction,” and it is referred to the clerk to state an account of the guardianship of Ridley Brown. Afterwards that reference was set aside and one Davis was made referee, who, at Fall Term, 1871, reported an account to which exceptions were filed by defendant, Jacob F. Brown, which were overruled, and judgment given against him for the sum found due by the report, from which he appealed to this Court.

It is contended for the defendant that the action cannot be maintained on the relation of Jones, trustee, &c. It is necessary to notice, very briefly only, the position oí the counsellor the plaintiff, that the question was concluded by the refusal of the Judge to non-suit the plaintiff. A plaintiff cannot be compelled to be non-suited if he is actually in Court prosecuting his action. Moreover, such a refusal concludes nothing; every *477 ground on which a defendant could ask for an opinion of the Court adverse to the right of the plaintiff, would continue open to him at the trial by asking instructions from the Court, and excepting if improperly refused. It is also a misconception on the part of the plaintiff that the question is one of jurisdiction arising out of some personal disability of the plaintiff. The State is the plaintiff of record, and can be under no disability. In not one of the cases was the objection to the relator taken by plea in abatement, and it would bo difficult or impossible to draw such a plea. It would necessarily be in substance a plea that the condition had not been broken, and so be a plea in bar.

To understand the true nature of the objection, and ascertain whether it is now open to the defendants, it will be necessary to look at the course of pleading in actions on official or other bonds with conditions.

Rev. Code, ch. 54, sec. 5,, enacts that all bonds taken from guardians shall be made payable to the State, and any jperson injured may, at his own costs, prosecute a suit thereon, and recover all damages he may have sustained by reason of the breach of the conditions thereof, and if judgment shall be rendered against the relator, he shall pay the costs. The relator who may prosecute the suitin the name of the State is any jperson injured by the breach, of the condition. He must be named as relator in the writ of cajpias, because it is necessary for that to show by whom the suit is prosecuted, in order that it may be seen that some one, and who, is responsible for costs, and also because the writ usually and properly, after demanding the debt, contains the formula, which the defendant detains to the damage of said Jones ten thousand dollars.”

The declaration follows the writ, and after setting out the bond, with its condition, assigns a breach by which the relator was injured to a certain amount, &e.

If the defendant meant to take issue in law, that the relator was not a person that could, in law, be injured by the breach *478 assigned, he might have demurred. That was not done here. He might also plead denying the breach. Ir this case the defendant pleads “ General issue, execution of bond admitted,” &e. Certainly this was a very informal way of pleading performance, and it is only by making great allowance for the loose and inaccurate mode ot pleading that ¥ as general before the present Code, that it can be considered to have that effect. As no objection was taken to it we construe it in that way. The authorities hereinafter cited show that the defence was held available under the plea of the general issue. By this plea an issue of fact is made for a jury. Upon this the relator would, of course, be entitled to recover only such damages as he had sustained by the breach. So that a question of law is involved, the same which woiild have been presented directly by the demurrer at a previous stage of the ease, viz : whether the person alleged to be injured by the breach ¥ras in law injured ? Does he come within the condition of the bond % Upon this the Judge will instruct the jury at the trial. It is in this way, and at this stage of the proceedings, that the question arises in this case. The exact shape of the question, and the precise time in which it would occur, might be varied by the form of the report of the referee, and ot the exceptions thereto, &c. Rut still the Court must decide this question before or at the time of final judgment. We have said enough to show that the defendants had a'right to raise this question at the trial. The Judge held this question in favor of the relator, and by the appeal we are .called on to decide it.

We may be excused for expressing our regret at being compelled to decide questions of practice arising out of the fact that, under our former system, legal and equitable rights were administered in different Courts, and out of the rule of the law Courts that they would take no notice of equities. Our decision must be founded on a state of the law which has passed away, and though from its importance to the present *479 parties, it requires and has received our patient consideration, yet it is of no importance to any one else.

In deciding such a question we feel bound to decide in exact accordance with the rule established by previous decisions, if such a rule can be found applicable; but if no such can be found, then of course we are obliged to decide upon what seems to us the reason which governs the case. We have examined all the authorities to which we were referred by the learned counsel.

State v. Lightfoot 2, Ire. 306, was an action on a constable’s bond; the relators were two of the members of the firm of Evans, Home & Co.; the breach assigned was that the constable had failed to pay to the relators a sum collected by him of London, who was a member of the firm when the claims were put into his hands, but who had ceased to be so before the breach. The Court say that the persons with whom he contracted (that is all the original partners) were in contemplation of law the persons injured, and the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover.

The Governor v. Deaver 3. Ire. 56, vas also on a constable’s bond, and the claim given the constable to collect w^as assigned by the relator to a third party afterwards.

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McKinnon v. . McKinnon
81 N.C. 201 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1879)
State Ex Rel. Harris v. Harrison
78 N.C. 202 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1878)
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76 N.C. 318 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1877)
State Ex Rel. Jones v. Brown
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Bluebook (online)
67 N.C. 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-jones-v-brown-nc-1872.