Stegar v. Eggleston's Ex'ors

5 Va. 449
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 1805
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Va. 449 (Stegar v. Eggleston's Ex'ors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stegar v. Eggleston's Ex'ors, 5 Va. 449 (Va. Ct. App. 1805).

Opinion

*TUCKER Judge.

This question, depending upon what I have conceived to be a settled point of practice, in which I have the misfortune to differ in opinion with the majority of the court, I conceive myself bound to deliver the grounds of that opinion.

The case was shortly thus : -The appellees brought an action of debt in the county court, upon a joint and several bill penal, given, as the declaration alleges, to the representatives of Richard Eggleston deceased, by a certain John Clack and the appellant Samuel Stegar. The suit abated as to Clarke, by the sheriff’s return. The defendant Stegar pleaded payment generally, ■ without alleging by whom such payment w,as made; and, issue being joined upon that plea, the parties went to trial. Upon which, the court, on the motion of the defendant Stegar, admitted sundry witnesses to prove, that the testator of the plaintiffs declared, in his lifetime, that he had received payment of a certain John Clarke, in part of a debt for which the defendant Stegar was bound as security for the said John Clarke; and that a small balance was to be paid by William Clarke. That the account of sales, of the date of the bond, noticed John Clarke as a purchaser, and not John Clack, as in the declaration mentioned. And that it was contended, that the name John Clack, to the bond subscribed, was intended for John Clarke; the letter c in the word Clack, resembling precisely the letter r in other words of the bond. To this evidence, the plaintiffs objected, and the objection being overruled, [1013]*1013he filed a bill of exceptions to the court’s opinion.

I pass over the other evidence, (although in favour of the plaintiffs,) as unimportant under the view I mean to take of the case.

A verdict being found for the defendant, the court gave judgment accordingly ; which was reversed by the district court; and, from the latter judgment, Stegar has appealed to this court.

Amidst the variety of names which every day presents to us, it will not be contended, I presume, that there could not *have been such a person as John Clack, in the declaration mentioned ; that that person might not have entered into an obligation to the plaintiffs’ testator; and that Samuel Stegar was his security in that obligation : that there was such a person ; that he executed the obligation upon which the suit was brought; and that Samuel Stegar, the appellant, was his security, and executed the same obligation, is expressly charged in the declaration.

It is a rule, in judicial proceedings, that nothing which is confessed by the pleadings between the parties need be proved ; or shall afterwards be controverted between them.

The plea of payment confesses the obligation as described in the declaration. It confesses, therefore, that there was such a person as John Clack; that John Clack sealed the obligation declared upon ; and . that Samuel Stegar joined him as a security or party, to that obligation.

The obligation, as thus described, being admitted, any reference to a transaction between the appellees’ testator, and the defendant Stegar, as security for a person of any other name, or any other person in the world but John Clack, the person confessed by the plea to have been the obligor in the bond with the defendant Stegar, was wholly irrelevant, and inadmissible.

That John Clack and John Clarke were identically the same person, was not put in issue in any manner by the plea ; that there might have been fifty different John Clacks, as many different John Clarkes, and as many different bonds executed by them respectively with Stegar as security, will scarcely be denied. The evidence, therefore, upon this state of the pleadings between the parties, ought, I conceive, to have been totally rejected, as going to controvert that which had been previously admitted by the defendant.

Considerable stress seems to have been laid by the appellant’s counsel, on the difficulty that he found in defending himself. And that he found himself at a loss is evident from the record. I should not, however, think it incumbent on me to say any thing as to this question, had I not *the misfortune to differ from my seniors in my present opinion. But I owe it as a respect to them, to say what was the regular course which the defendant might have adopted.

First. He might have demanded oyer of the obligation ; and, if upon receiving a copy, it had appeared that the name was Clarke and not Clack, he might have spread it upon the record, and demurred for the variance, Harrison’s K. B. 98 ; and, if, upon inspection, the court had found the bond and declaration not to agree, he would have had judgment, unless the plaintiffs had been permitted to amend their declaration upon payment of costs. Which, in this case, I suppose, would not have been permitted, after the entry of an abatement as to the principal party in the bond.

Secondly. The defendant Stegar might have pleaded the special matter thus irregularly brought before the court upon the trial, confessing (by protestation) that the said writing obligatory was his deed ; but averring that he sealed the same together with a certain John Clarke, and not John Clack, as in the declaration is supposed ; and then averring that the said John Clarke had paid the debt in the declaration mentioned, concluded with traversing that he sealed the same with the said John Clack. If issue had been taken upon this plea, and had been found for him, he must have had judgment in his favour.

Thirdly. He might at the trial have applied to the court to withhold the bond produced from going to the jury in evidence) because of the alleged variance between that bond, and that described in the declaration. Drummond v. Crutcher, 2 Wash. 218. And if the court, upon that motion, had been of opinion that there was a variance, the bond must have been withheld ; and the plaintiff must either have submitted to a nonsuit, or to a verdict against him for want of evidence.

If there was no variance, the bond must have gone to the jury ; and, in that case, the evidence admitted was wholly improper. For, either the bond should have been withheld, or the defendant’s evidence. Both could not, I conceive, be admitted together, for the reason before mentioned.

*1 am therefore of opinion that the judgment of the district court ought to be affirmed.

ROANE, Judge.

The bond stated in the declaration is the bond of Clack and Stegar. The plea of payment applies to such bond, and admits its existence. The bond offered in evidence, if in the opinion of the defendant variant on the face of it, as being' the bond of Clarke, might have been demurred to for such variance, or might have been arrested by the court on his motion ; or, perhaps, without such motion, it being the constant practice to compare the bond produced with that stated in the declaration. Buller, 169. If the bond produced was variant from that stated, the court and not the jury was the proper tribunal to arrest it, it being the proper province of the court to reject inapplicable, or illegal testimony : But the defendant does not address any objection to the court; and as the case stands upon the pleadings, both the bond stated, and that produced, are admitted to be the bond of Clack.

It is a general rule, that a jury cannot find any thing against that which the parties have affirmed and admitted of record, though the truth be contrary. Buller, 298. This rule equally applies to evidence leading to such a finding.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pacific Cable Construction Co. v. McNatt
27 P. 869 (Washington Supreme Court, 1891)
Hammitt v. Bullett's Executors
5 Va. 492 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1799)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Va. 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stegar-v-egglestons-exors-vactapp-1805.