Wallace v. McCarty

8 W. Va. 193, 1875 W. Va. LEXIS 2
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 8 W. Va. 193 (Wallace v. McCarty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallace v. McCarty, 8 W. Va. 193, 1875 W. Va. LEXIS 2 (W. Va. 1875).

Opinion

Haymond, President :

The plaintiff, prior to the March term, 1872, of the cjrcuit court of the county of Pocahontas, caused a written notice to be served on the defendants that he would,, at that term of said court, move the court for judgment against defendants for $626, with interest thereon from-the 1st day of July, 1871, upon an undertaking entered into by them on the 1st day of July, 1871, for the delivery of certain personal property therein named.

At the said March term, 1872, by consent of the parties by their attorneys, the cause was ordered to be docketed and continued until a subsequent day of the term. On the next day, which was the 9th day of March, 1872, the parties appeared in court, and the defendants moved the court to quash the undertaking, but the court overruled the motion; and thereupon the defendants filed a plea in writing, denying the execution of the undertaking, to which the plaintiff replied generally. This is disclosed by the order of the court made on the 9th day of March, 1872. The court heard the evidence adduced, and decided the cause without the interposition of a jury, and rendered a judgment against the defendants on the undertaking for the sum of $626, with interest from the 29th day of July, 1871, and the costs of the motion. The j udgment was not rendered until the 11th-day of March, 1872. On the trial of the motion the defendants filed a bill of exceptions to the opinion of the court. The undertaking, among other, things, appears in the bill of exceptions, but is not there correctly copied; but by agreement of the attorneys for the parties, in this Court, the original, as filed in the clerk’s office and as it was when the court gave judgment thereon, was, at the hearing of the cause, presented to this Court to be examined and considered in connection with the record, and as part of the cause. The undertaking, on its face and as it appears in the record, is substantially, in most particulars, according to the form prescribed by the first section of chapter one hundred and forty-two [195]*195of the Code of this State. But the undertaking, recited in the record, after reciting the levied on, proceeds thus, viz: “Now, .therefore, we, and each of us, undertake that the said. J. ~W. D. McCarty, (the execution debtor,) will deliver the said property to the said sheriff, at Mill Point, on the 29th day of July, 1871, then and there to be sold to satisfy such execution; and in case he fails to do so that we, or either of us, will pay to the said Matthew "Wallace the sum of $626. Three horses to be delivered at Huntersville on the 7th day of August, 1871, — the sum of $626. Given under our hands this 31st day of July, 1871.” According to the face of the undertaking, as the original appears, “four cows, three calves, 'thirteen hogs, one wagon, and the half of one wagon,” was the property levied on and to be delivered; but immediately after are these words, all of which are crossed out, but can still be read as originally written, “ and three,” with the word “ two ” written immediately above it, “ head of horses, the horses, to be delivered at Huntersville, in front of the courthouse door, on the 1st day of August, 1871,” &c. The facts proven, as certified by the court, show “ that three horses were valued by the deputy sheriff, and, according to his valuation placed upon the property, it took three horses, together with the other property, to make the sum mentioned in said undertaking, and that valuation was inserted in the undertaking when it was signed, which signing occurred some days before the delivery thereof, except as to the defendant Overholt; that the defendant McCarty had promised his attorney to prepare the undertaking, with a recital therein, among other things, that three horses had been levied on, but that while the undertaking was in the possession of said McCarty, and before the time of delivery to the deputy sheriff, the word (three ’ was erased and ‘ two substituted therefor ; that at the time ot the acknowledgment and delivery of said undertaking all the undertakers were convened at the reeptest the deputy sheriff, MeKeevar, when the defendant Over-[196]*196holt signed the same; and after the same had been ac'knowledged and delivered by the several undertakers, who had all left the room and were standing on the out•side of the house, excepting the defendant, McCarty, who -was still present, the said deputy sheriff changed the 'word f two’ to three/ thus inserting three horses instead of two.”

The foregoing facts were proved by the plaintiff and 'the defendants then proved, “that when they signed, acknowledged and delivered the said undertaking to the said deputy sheriff there were only two horses mentioned and named in said undertaking; that after they had signed, acknowledged, and delivered said undertaking the said deputy sheriff changed the word two to three ■and inserted three horses in said undertaking; that after the same was thus altered by the said deputy sheriff, it was not re-acknowledged or re-delivered by the said undertakers.”

From the lace of the undertaking it appears that the •day specified for the delivery of a considerable part of the property had passed when the undertaking was executed — that is all the property mentioned in the undertaking except the horses — and the value of this property •constituted a part of the value placed upon all the property including the horses, to-wit: the said $626.

The undertaking provided for by the Code of 1868, takes the place of the forthcoming bond provided for by former laws. The first section of chapter one hundred and forty-two of the Code of 1868, provides that, “The sheriff or other officer levying a distress warrant, or a writ of fieri fcteias issued from the office of the clerk of a circuit court, may take from the debtor an undertaking signed by himself or by some person for him with one or more good securities in from or effect as follows, viz :

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 W. Va. 193, 1875 W. Va. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-v-mccarty-wva-1875.