Webb v. Bowman's Executors

26 Ky. 70, 3 J.J. Marsh. 70, 1829 Ky. LEXIS 177
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 22, 1829
StatusPublished

This text of 26 Ky. 70 (Webb v. Bowman's Executors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webb v. Bowman's Executors, 26 Ky. 70, 3 J.J. Marsh. 70, 1829 Ky. LEXIS 177 (Ky. Ct. App. 1829).

Opinion

Judge Underwood

delivered the opinion of the Court.

John Bowman instituted an action of ejectment in the Henry circuit court, which was removed by change of the venue to the Franklin circuit, in which a recovery was had against Webb, Dunn and Perry. Commissioners were appointed in pursuance of the occupying claimant acts,, and upon their report, Bowman elected to make the tenants in possession pay for the land; the improvements having exceeded three-fourths the value of the land, estimating it in its natural state. At the April term, 1820, of the Franklin circuit court, the record states, that the parties ,came by their attorneys, and thereupon Bowman made his election to release his title, and thereupon executed deeds of release to the occupants respectively, and also bonds with Jesse Smith, his security, conditioned as required by the said act, and the said occupants respectively entered into bond and security to pay to said Bowman the assessed value, of their respective tracts, as unimproved land.

[71]*71The deeds of release and bonds conditioned to re* •fund, in case the land should be taken by paramount claims, executed by Bowman are exhibited, but the bonds executed to Bowman, by the occupants, for valuation of the lands recovered, are not to be found in the clerk’s office of the Franklin circuit court. So that Bowman was unable to obtain executions thereon, when the money for the land became due.

Under this state of things, Bowman filed his bill in the Henry circuit court, against Webb, Dunn and Perry, stating the sums they were respectively to pay for the lands recovered of them by the judgment in the action of ejectment, and charging that Perry was surety for Webb, and Webb was surety'for Perry and Dunn, that Webb had purchased Dunn’s land, and bound himself to pay Bowman therefor the sum which Dunn, under the report of the commissioners, had to-pay ; that Dunn was a non-resident, and that the clerk had informed him, Bowman, that the defendants, instead of executing the bonds as required by the court, and as stated in the order of court, had only signed blank pieces of paper, which had never been filled up, and that the defendants, or some of them, had called at the clerk’s office and withdrawn the blanks thus signed, which the clerk was requested to fill up, conformably to the order of court, at the time they were signed by the parties. Wherefore, the complainant prayed for a decree to enforce the payment of the several sums due him for the land relinquished by him, and that the land might be sold to pay the same, and for general relief.

The defendants filed a demurrer to the bill, which was joined, but which does not appear ever to have been disposed of by the court. At the term next after the demurrer was filed, the defendant, Webb, filed his answer. He admits most of the material allegations of the bill. He states that he withdrew the blanks from the clerk’s office which were signed, and designed to be filled up as bonds for the complainant, because upon inquiry he could not find the deeds relinquishing the complainant’s title, and the refunding bonds, which it was his duty, under the statute to execute; and he insists that no decree ought to be rendered against him, because Carneal had re[72]*72covered since the complainant,a part of the same land; and because there were outstanding, paramount titles, to other portions of the land,in Crawford and Moore. The complainant, in a replication to the ánswer rf Webb, denies the superiority of Crawford’s title, and states that he had purchased in the titles of Carneal and Moore.

The court on hearing, decreed against Dunn $250, against Webb, $501 50, and against Perry, $585, •with interest on each sum from (he first of April, 1820, and authorized executions to issue against the parties respectively, for the sums decreed, and directed that if the money was not collected or voluntarily paid, before the next term of the court, that the tenement purchased by the defendant who' might fail to make payment, or so much as was necessary, should be sold by the sheriff of the county, to raise the money. From this decree Webb and Perry have prosecuted an appeal.

It is contended that the Plenty circuit court had no jurisdiction of the cause; that the complainant sued parties jointly, who could not properly be united, and that the court erred in the nature and extent of its decree. The determination of these points will, we think, be clear by considering the nature of the injury which the complainant had sustained. ■ According to the record, the defendants in the action of ejectment, had executed bonds with surety, to the complainant, for the sums at which the lands recovered from them respectively were valued. The statute relating to the rights and duties of occupants, was fully complied with. The record upon the subject is conclusive between the parties, and estops them, so that neither can say that the bonds were not fully and properly executed by the defendants, for the payment of the valuation of the lands. If these bonds had remained in the clerk’s oifice, or could be found there, the remedy of the complainant would have been complete at law, by suing out executions upon them as the bonds reached maturity. For the statute expressly imparts to them the force of judgments, and authorizes executions to issue upon them.

slaiulory bonds, having force of judg. stroyed, may be set up by tions.° Must be a^annex-tingup'sfaiu-lory bond as in cases of

But if these bonds, through fraud or accident, have Been taken from the clerk’s office, or destroyed, so that executions cannot be issued upon them, and thereby the remedy at law has been rendered unavailing, then we are of opinion it would be proper to resort to a court of chancery, for the purpose of setting up the lost or destroyed bond.

We perceive no reason why a replevin bond or other statutory bond, having the force of a judgment, shall not be setup when lost or destroyed, by the chancellor, precisely as any other obligation would be. it seems to us, there is as much necessity for the interposition of the chancellor in the one case as the other, and we think the proceedings should be alike in respect to the loss of each description of bond. Under this view, it is manifest that the complainant has omitted to do the first thing requisite to give the chancellor jurisdiction in cases like his, and that is to make oath that the bond which he desires to have set up- is lost or destroyed, so that it may be seen on the filing of the bill, that the remedy at law is inadequate. The objection is fatal to the proceedings and decree against Dunn, who is only constructively before the court, by order of publication. In respect to him, it was the duty of the court, ex officio, to see that the case presented itself within the jurisdiction ofthe court. But as it regards the other defendants, we are of opinion that the demurrer and answer of Webb, by admitting that the bonds were withdrawn from the office by Webb, and thereby acknowledging a state of case in which it was proper for a court oF equity to interpose, superseded the necessity of making the failure, of the complainant to file an affidavit with his bill, a complete barrier to the jurisdiction of the court, in like manner as a demurrer to a plea, which the law requires slyould he sworn to, will supersede the necessity of the oath to it.

But there is another ground upon which we are of opinion the whole of the defendants might well object to the proceeding Against them, and that is the attempt to unite them all as defendants in the same bill.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Ky. 70, 3 J.J. Marsh. 70, 1829 Ky. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-bowmans-executors-kyctapp-1829.