Brown v. Richardsons
Brown v. Richardsons
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court. The petitioners aver that Wm. Anthon Richardson, Wade Richardson, John G. Richardson, Jared Richardson, and James Richardson, residents of the state of Mississippi, are indebted to them in the sum of $2630 99/100 for this, that Joseph Fuqua and Wade Richardson, trading under the firm of Fuqua & Richardson, made their promissory note for that amount in favor of Francis Richardson, deceased, who being indebted to the peti tioners, endorsed it to them. That they presented it to the drawers, who refused payment, and that they caused it to be protested, and due notice thereof given to the endorser and his representatives. In consequence of which they state that the persons above named, who are heirs of Francis Richardson, have become liable to them for the note thus endorsed by their ancestor, and more particularly so, as they have received property of his estate to a larger amount than that now claimed of them.
The petition concludes by stating, that the parties above named reside permanently out
An attachment issued as prayed for, and the sheriff returned that he had attached in the hands of the garnishees, the goods and chattles, lands and tenements, credits, &c. of the defendants, to satisfy the demand contained in the petition.
Two of the defendants, viz. Wm. A. Richardson and John G. Richardson, released the property attached, which belonged to them, and gave bond with security, conditioned as the law directs.
The attorney appointed by the court to defend the rights of the parties, non-residents, filed an answer in which he stated, that under the authority conferred on him by the appointment of the court; he denied the allegations contained in the petition, and pleaded specially—1st, that the note was made in the state of Mississippi, where the ancestor of the defendant’s resided and died, and that the plaintiffs'
One of the defendants, Wade Richardson, is a partner in the house of Fuqua & Richardson, who are the makers of the note, and as he is heir to Francis Richardson, who is endorser, it has been made a question in this case, whether the petition, the material averments of which we have just recited, does not charge him as maker, as well as heir to the endorser. We are clearly satisfied it does not. It is not sufficient, that the facts necessary to be stated, to create responsibility in one character, establish liability in another, to authorise this court to conclude that therefore the defendant was sued in both. Every thing in a petition should be plain and perspicuous, and the party sued ought to be clearly instructed why he is sought to be condemned, not left to infer it from doubtful and obscure allegations.
The next question is, which of the parties named are regularly before the court. It has been contended that only two of them, W. A.
The next inquiry which the case presents is, as to the liability of the defendants. The contract on which they are sued was made at
The counsel have agreed that the common law and statutes of England, up to the year 1776, form the rule of action in that state, except so far as they are changed by its legislative enactments.
At common law the heir was not bound by the contract of his ancestor, unless expressly named in it, Bacon's Ab. 3, 459—heir and ancestor. We do not find any thing in the laws of Mississippi, which alters or affects this principle, or which makes him responsible. What relief a court of equity in that state would afford to a creditor, on a contract made in another country, against the heir, who (after the payment of all the supposed debts of the estate by the executor) had received the residuary portion, we do not know. But on such proof as has been given in this case, the defendants could not even be pursued before that tribunal; for the executors swear that
We recognise the distinction made by the plaintiffs’ counsel between the right and the remedy, and agree with him that contracts should be expounded according to the laws of the country where they are made, and enforced according to the regulations which prevail where the debtor is found. It is that distinction which gives the defendants immunity in this case. For in order to ascertain who is debtor, we must recur to the laws of the country where the contract was made; and if these laws do not make persons standing in the character of the appellants liable, under the circumstances now in proof, they cannot be made so by a change of jurisdiction. It is true, that according to our jurisprudence, the heir is obliged to pay the debts of the ancestor, if he accepts the succession unconditionally ; but it does not follow that the same rule exists in other countries. An embarrassment is created in considering the case, from a feeling which it is difficult to check, that there exists something like a natural obligation on the child to pay the parents debts—particu
But it is contended that the heirs are only sued here as the means of getting at the property of their ancestor. To this argument we think the reply of the defendants’ counsel is satisfactory. If Richardson, who died in the state of Mississippi, has property in Louisiana, and his heirs live out of its limits, the succession is a vacant one, and a curator should be appointed for it—M'Kenzie vs. Havard, 12 Martin, 101.
The last point is the liability of one of the defendants as drawer, and we are of opinion that the district court did not err in giving judgment against him in that capacity. He is proved to be the maker; and although, as we have already seen, the petition was not sufficiently explicit to allow us to say that the defendant was apprised of being sued in that character; yet, as it appears an investigation was gone into in the court of the first instance in relation to his responsibility, as such, and as the evidence taken establishes that respon
The investigation we have gone into, as to the rights of all the defendants, expresses our opinion on an objection made that only two of them had appealed. On the whole, we think that the judgment of the district court should be annulled, avoided and reversed: and proceeding to give such judgment as in our opinion ought to have been rendered in that court; it is ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the plaintiffs do recover of the defendant, Wade Richardson, the sum of two thousand six Hundred and thirty dollars, 95 cents, with interest on the said sum at eight per cent. for the 22d March, 1822, until paid, and costs of suit. and by reason of the garnishees, —
It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed, that there be judgment for the other defendants against the plaintiffs, as in a case of non-suit.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JOHN BROWN & CO. v. RICHARDSONS
- Status
- Published