Clark v. Flagg
Clark v. Flagg
Opinion of the Court
1. In the argument of this case it was contended on the part of the defendants, that in computing the ninety days in which, by the terms of the bond, the surrender of the debtor was to be made, it was not competent to charge upon the parties a default as to such promise to surrender, by making a computation based upon the hour of the day of his original committal and that of his surrender, or in other words, to introduce into the computation fractions of a day, so that, if the debtor had been committed at 10 a. m. and had been surrendered at 2 p. m. of the ninetieth day, there would be a breach of the bond. We entertain no doubts on this subject, and think the defendants’ view, excluding the fractions of the day, is the correct one.
If the defendants had further satisfied us that any such ruling or instruction to the jury had been in fact given by the presiding judge, we should, have set aside the verdict. But upon a careful scrutiny of the bill of exceptions, we find no such ruling. It is true that evidence was admitted by the court, of the hour of the day at which the committal to prison occurred, and also the hour of the day at which the alleged surrender was made. The object of this testimony is not stated in the bill of exceptions. As to the evidence concerning the hour of the alleged surrender of the debtor, it might have been competent evidence for the purposes suggested by the counsel for the plaintiff, as bearing upon the litigated question whether any surrender was made, and with a view of showing some facts controlling the evidence of the defendants tending to show the surrender of the debtor on the day alleged.
As to the evidence of the hour of the day on which the. orig
2. A further question was raised in this case upon the effect of a discharge of the debtor, the principal in the bond, in proceedings in insolvency under the St. of 1838, c. 163. It is said that the discharge of the principal, after breach of this bond, from all future liability thereon, is the discharge of his sureties also. But such is not the effect of the discharge of a principal under our insolvent law. The statute just cited directly provides for this case, and enacts “ that no discharge of any debtor, under this act, shall release or discharge any
Exceptions overruled.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Isaac M. Clark v. Bailey K. Flagg & others
- Status
- Published