United States v. Stafford

27 F. Cas. 1284, 2 Paine 525
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 27 F. Cas. 1284 (United States v. Stafford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Stafford, 27 F. Cas. 1284, 2 Paine 525 (circtndny 1871).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Circuit Justice.

This case comes before the court on a writ of error to the Northern district of this state. A bill of exceptions was taken at the trial, and the argument here has been brought under considerations growing out of the pleadings, as well as the exceptions at the trial. The pleadings are extremely loose and inaccurate, and seem to have been more calculated to entangle the case in the net of form, than to have it tried upon its merits; and it would have been a discreet exercise of the powers of the court below to have corrected this by ordering a repleader. That, however, is beyond the reach of this court in the present stage of the cause; and I shall only notice the objections arising upon the bill of exceptions. The action is in debt on a bond, bearing date the 1st September, 1813, in the penalty of $20,000, with a condition reciting, that by general orders of the commander-in-chief of the state of New York, certain militia of the state of New York had been organized and ordered into the service of the United States; and that Samuel Ed-monds had been duly assigned and appointed principal paymaster of all the militia of said state which had been or might be ordered into the service of the United States, condition.ed that if the said Edmonds shall keep and render just and true accounts and vouchers of all his receipts and expenditures in said office, and account for, and deliver and pay over to some proper officer or department of the United States, all moneys and public property of the United States which may be in his custody, possession or control, and shall in all things honestly, faithfully and truly demean himself in the said office of principal paymaster, then the obligation to be void. Upon the trial, the plaintiffs produce in evidence a transcript from the treasury department, duly authenticated, stating the balance only of account between the United States and Samuel Edmonds, late paymaster-general of the New York militia.

Two objections were taken to the admission of this evidence: (1) That it did not purport to be an account against Samuel Edmonds, in his character or capacity as charged in the bond, and alleged in the declaration. (2) That it stated only the balance, and did not state the items. Although the exception, with respect to the form in which the account was presented, may be a mistake as to the capacity in which Ed-monds stands charged at the treasury, and which probably might be explained, under proper averments in' the declaration; yet, as the case stood upon the pleadings and evidence before the court, the transcripts did not correspond with the allegations in the declaration. In the bond and declaration, Edmonds is described as principal paymaster of the militia of the state of New York, which have been or may be ordered into the service of the state of New York; and the evidence was an account against him as paymaster-general of the New York [1287]*1287militia. The court could not, as ■ matter of law, decide that these different descriptions applied to the same officer. In the account, he is not only described as paymaster-general, instead of principal paymaster, but he is called paymaster-general of the New York militia, which may include all the militia of New York; whereas, the bond is as principal paymaster of the militia of ■ New York, which has been or may be ordered into the service of the United States. The latter capacity is more limited than the former; and it is in the more limited capacity that’the sureties have bound themselves; and they have a right to confine their responsibility to their undertaking by their bond. Both Edmonds and his sureties may be estopped, by their bond, from denying that he acted in the character of principal paymaster of the militia of the state of New York, ordered into the service of the United States, and might be held accountable for money paid over to him, and to be disbursed in that character; but it must be shown that money was advanced to him in •that character, in order to make his sur'eties responsible. The suggestion that there may be some mistake in the statement of the account from the treasury, is founded upon the • circumstance that in the bill of particulars furnished under the order of the district judge, it purports to be a statement of moneys received by Samuel Edmonds, principal paymaster, corresponding with his character, as described in the bond; but the court cannot judicially know that Edmonds did not undertake to discharge duties also, .under the character of paymaster-general of the militia of New York, and moneys received by him as such would not be covered by the bond. This supersedes the necessity of examining the other objections arising upon the bill of exceptions.

NOTE. In an action on a bond for the payment of a sum of money by instalments, it is not necessary to assign breaches in the declaration according to the requirement of the statute. Spaulding v. Millard, 17 Wend. 331. In declaring on a justice’s judgment, rendered in this state, it is sufficient, besides stating the amount of the judgment, the time and place of its rendition, and the name of the magistrate, to allege that the judgment was rendered in a justice’s court in a county of this state, in an action of which justices of the peace have civil jurisdiction. Stiles v. Stewart, 12 Wend. 473. In declaring on a justice’s judgment of a sister state, the statute giving jurisdiction to the justice must be pleaded. Sheldon v. Hopkins, 7 Wend. 435. In a suit on a bond given by a deputy sheriff for the faithful performance of the duties of his office, the plaintiff must assign breaches, and cannot, without such assignment, take a verdict for even nominal damages. Barnard v. Darling, 11 Wend. 30. Where, in an action of debt, two several sums are demanded as due and owing in two separate counts, the declaration should, in the commencement, demand the aggregate amount, the first count should describe the sum demanded in it as parcel. &.C., and the second count the sum demanded in it as the residue, &c. People v. Van Eps, 4 Wend. 387. The assignee of a lease, who enters upon and occupies the demised premises, is liable for the rent in like manner with the assignor. In declaring against him, he may be described as assignee in general terms; and the manner in which the assignment was made need not be set forth. But the assignee cannot be made answerable, by the action of debt, for the rent of any part of the premises demised, except that which has been possessed and enjoyed by himself; and the rent in such cases may be apportioned, the action being founded on the privity of estate merely, and not on the privity of contract. Norton v. Vultee, 1 Hall, 384. The plaintiffs demised certain premises, for a term of yeare, to one F. L. Vultee. The lessee, a short time before the expiration of the term, died, and the defendant (his widow) took out letters of administration upon his estate, and continued in possession of a part of the premises until the lease expired. An action of debt being brought against her for all the rent which was in arrear at the time of the expiration of the lease, it was held, that she was only liable in this action for the rent of such parts of the premises as had been occupied by her after her husband’s death, xd. By the second section of the act (1 Rev. Laws, 222), any person, losing at any game any sum above twenty-five dollars, and paying the same, may, at any time within three months, recover it back of the winner by an action of debt, founded on the act .As the remedy afforded to the loser is provided by statute, in pursuing that remedy the forms and limitations prescribed must be observed; and a general action of assumpsit will not lie. Id.

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Bluebook (online)
27 F. Cas. 1284, 2 Paine 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-stafford-circtndny-1871.