Commonwealth v. Blair
Commonwealth v. Blair
Opinion of the Court
Opinion of the Court by
At the August term, 1861, of the Circuit Court for the county of Daviess, Geo. M. Taylor was appointed trustee of the jury fund in that county, and executed bond or covenant for the discharge of his duties as such, with four sureties. The statute requires a renewal of the bond every second year, but the court having the general supervision of the fund and of the officer, and being expressly invested with the power of removing the officer might undoubtedly require or receive a new bond whenever one should be deemed necessary by the judge, or should be offered by the officer.
Npon comparison of the two bonds it appears that but one of the sureties who had executed the first was a party to the second, and that J". H. Blain, the appellee in this case, did not execute the second bond. At the June term, 1863, of the Franklin Circuit Court a judgment was rendered in favor of the Commonwealth and against the parties to the first bond alone for a large sum of money, being the balance in Taylor’s hands as trustee at a period long subsequent to the execution of the second bond, together with interest and damages thereon and the costs.
In January, 1865, the Legislature passed an act which authorized Blair to file a petition stating the facts and reasons for his being exempt from liability for said judgment, and authorizing an injunction, etc. The petition was accordingly filed, and the leports and settlements of Taylor were filed, and the court being of opinion that the second bond was not cumulative but a renewal, which discharged the obligors in the first bond from future liability, and that they were not liable for the balance found due from Taylor on the subsequent settlement on which the judgment was rendered, perpetuated the injunction.
Whether the second bond should be regarded as cumulative, or as a renewal and substitution for the first, is the only question which has been seriously argued.
As the second bond was voluntarily tendered by Taylor, signed by one, and one only, of the original sureties, we can conceive no other probable motive for its execution but that of exonerating such of the original sureties as did not wish to be further bound for Taylor, and as this must have been understood by the court the bond should be construed as having that effect.
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.