Lampton v. Jones
Lampton v. Jones
Opinion of the Court
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
In 1824, Lampton declared against Jones in two counts, one for money had and received, for inoney lent, for money laid out and expended; the other upon an undertaking to collect various debts, due by notes and replevin bonds, and accounts put into the defendant’s hands to collect and account for, with an averment that he had collected part, and by negligence rendered himself responsible for those not collected, and laying an assumpsit, in consideration thereof, to pay the amount of said accounts and debts.
The defendant pleaded non-assumpsit, and that the action did not accrue within five years, upon which issues were joined to the country.
Upon the trial the plaintiff gave in evidence the defendants receipts, dated in April, 1818, and in July, 1818, for various notes, accounts and executions, according to the lists in said receipts, acknowledging the receipt thereof from the plaintiff, to collect and account for agreeably to law, as constable of Clarke county, and proved that at the time of said receipts the defendant acted as constable.
The defendant then gave in evidence a record of a former suit instituted by the plaintiff against the defendant in 1821, in case, with various counts for county levies, revenue taxes and sums of money of various descriptions, “according to the annexed lists,” entrusted to the defendant in 1818, to collect
Upon motion, the court instructed the jury, that the former suit, and recovery thereon, was an effectual bar to this, and that the testimony adduced by plaintiff to show the demand in the former suit, was not the same now sued on, was inadmissible: to which instructions the plaintiff excepted; the jury-found for the defendant; the plaintiff moved for a new trial, which was overruled; the plaintiff stated the whole evidence, and excepted to that opinion also.
The evidence offered touching a former recovery, was properly admitted under the general issue. (Burrows vs. Jemino, 2 Stran. 733; Young vs. Black, 7 Cran. 567.)
If the record given in evidence had proved upon inspection, that the former recovery was for the same cause of action, or indeed, that the demand then set up and litigated, and now sued for, was the same, then the instruction would have been correct. But from the former record it cannot! be ascertained whether the demand then sued for and recovered, was or was not the same as that now sued for; nor whether the demand then declared for and adjusted, was the same now declared for and given in evidence. This question is therefore to be detér
But the evidence offered by plaintiff was such as upon demurrer, or upon motion for instruction as in case of a non suit, the court would be bound to declare illegal and inadmissible. The plaintiff has mistaken his action. If he has cause of action upon the writing given in evidence, it was for breach of covenant, and not in case. The writing is a direct stipulation for the performance of a duty or undertaking; and the statute which gives to unsealed writings the force and effect as if sealed, destroys .the action on the case founded thereon. The judgment for the defendant is right, although for a wrong instruction given. The writ of error is to the judgment, not to the reasons by which it was produced. This court cannot reverse a judgment,, when upon the same evidence, the same judgment would be directed, although for a different reason.
It is therefore considered by the Court, that the judgment be affirmed, wits costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.