Thompson v. Bailey

39 S.C.L. 68
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 15, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 39 S.C.L. 68 (Thompson v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Bailey, 39 S.C.L. 68 (S.C. Ct. App. 1851).

Opinions

[71]*71The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Withers, J.

The proceedings against this defendant, as legal representative of Allen Moye, and against G. R. Odom, sureties of a deceased administratrix, before the Ordinary, were founded upon an administration bond bearing date in 1829. At that time, the decisions of the Court of Law required that an account -should be had with the administrator before the surety on his bond could be sued upon that obligation, in a court of law; and it was, moreover, held that in case of an absent administratrix, or one deceased with no legal representative, the accounting necessarily precedent to the enforcement of the surety’s liability could not be had before the Ordinary; nor could that officer summon the surety of an administrator, whether the latter was living or dead.

Such were the difficulties which obstructed an action at law against the surety of an administrator until 1839, when it was provided by Statute (vide sec. 9 of the Ordinary’s Act of that year) that in case of the removal of an administrator, or where he cannot be served, an account against him could be taken by the Ordinary, upon a citation of his sureties, or the representatives of a deceased surety; and, further, when the administrator shall have departed this life, without having accounted, leaving no executor or administrator, it shall be sufficient for the Ordinary to cite the securities by personal summons, or by notice in the Gazettee, as in the case of removal from the State, and proceed to take an account, as in other cases ; and the said decree shall have the same force and effect against the sureties as if pronounced against the administrator in his lifetime.”

We now have before us a case wherein an administratrix has departed this life, with no executor or administrator to represent her estate, (so far as we know) one surety on her bond surviving and a representative of another surety. The survivor and that representative of the deceased surety have been cited before the Ordinary, upon a petition for an account of the transactions of the administratrix; that accounting has been had upon the citation of such persons; a decree has been pronounced ascertain’ [72]*72ing a liability in favor of the real plaintiffs upon the estate of the deceased administratrix, and this action is against the representative of the deceased surety.

The first objection to this proceeding before the Ordinary is, that the representative of a surety cannot be cited, in the case of a deceased administrator; and so the decree against him, as such, in the Ordinary’s court, is void, being a cause coram non judice. We think otherwise; because, by express terms of the Act of 1839, such a representative may be cited in the case of an administrator removed, or one who could not be served, with a view to an account and decree against such administrator; and in case of an administrator dead and without legal representative (which is this case) the citation is to be on the sureties, “ as in the case of removal (by administrator) from the State.” The scope of the Act undoubtedly was, to remove difficulties at the threshold,— to open the way for efficient remedy against an obligor over obstacles of rather a technical character. The reason which moved the remedial legislation embraced all the cases in which such obstacles had before been interposed, and the words which describe this case will fairly allow a construction that conforms to the obvious scope and purpose of the Act of Assembly.

Next this action is resisted upon the ground of the inviolability of contracts ; and we are invited to consider whether the remedial scheme#of the Act of 1639 must not be held inapplicable to the bond of an administrator’s surety, executed before that date, because, otherwise. it would be obnoxious to the charge of violating the obligation of this contract.

Now, as heretofore, the contract of an administrator’s surety is held to import an obligation to indemnify for a default of the principal. Now, as heretofore, a decree, ascertaining the default of the principal, is held requisite. Now, as heretofore, such decree is held to be evidence only against the surety. There must be a clear distinction between the effect of legislation, or of judicial decision, which facilitates merely the mode and means of procuring evidence, and that which shall be considered [73]*73as impairing the obligation of the contract upon which such evidence is to bear. To open the way of approach to one who is liable on a contract, and to impose upon him, when you reach him, different terms of contract, or additional burthen or liability, suggest ideas quite dissimilar. Indeed, when we consider that the prohibition to pass a law impairing the obligation of a contract seems to imply the idea of protection to him who has the right and the interest to enforce it, facilities towards that very end would not appear to fall naturally within the purview. We suppose the Court of Equity might always have enforced the obligation against the surety in such a case as this, and if the machinery has been improved, by which the same thing may be done in another jurisdiction, we do not perceive how the obligation of the contract is thereby impaired or affected. In 1829, the death or removal of an administrator created difficulties in the way of one having interest in seeking a remedy for breach of contract against a surety. How can the removal of such obstacles in the course of the remedy, sought in a certain jurisdiction, be deemed to touch the obligation of the contract, when the very same interpretation of the contract is preserved, and not a particle of additional liability is imposed ? Surely a debtor upon note or bond would not be heard to invoke the protection of the doctrine we are considering, because, since the execution of the contract, a statute had substituted a different mode or grade of proof of the handwriting of a witness to the execution of the contract; or provided a facility of procuring any evidence touching the cause of action by a commission issued to a place or person where or to whom it could not have gone at the origin of the cause of action. Yet we have examples of legislation of both descriptions. In substance, the Act of 1839 has done no more. It has merely made a summons, in case of the death or removal of the administrator, to. his privies in law, equivalent to a personal summons to the administrator, for the purpose of taking the account held to be preliminary to action. Surely we may sustain such legislation as this against [74]*74the imputation levelled at it, when insolvent laws have withstood the like.

We do not suppose the matter adjudged in the case of the State vs. Wylie, (2 McM. 1,) at all conflicts with our opinion on this point. The legislature had declared that it should not be lawful to commence any action against a sheriff’s surety until a return of nulla bona should be had upon some execution against the sheriff. That provision was held to be a part of the contract of a sheriff’s surety, for reasons assigned; but, in that case, a distinction was expressed, between a statutory provision that “ related to the nature of a surety’s liability,” and

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39 S.C.L. 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-bailey-scctapp-1851.