McNutt ex rel. Moore v. Livingston
McNutt ex rel. Moore v. Livingston
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought on the official bond of the clerk of the circuit court of Madison county, for having improperly issued a writ of error and supersedeas on a judgment in favor of Moore, without requiring bond, with two sufficient sureties, as
The condition of the clerk’s bond required “ that he should faithfully perform the duties of his office,” and the plaintiff, in assigning a breach, has averred that the defendant “ did not faithfully perform the duties of his office, but that he failed to do so in this,” &c.; and after reciting the recovery of the judgment by Moore, the issuance of an execution thereon, a levy by the sheriff on slaves sufficient to pay the debt, the petition for writs of error and supersedeas, and the grant of the same by the clerk through his deputy, and the discharge of the levy by the sheriff in obedience thereto, it concludes by averring that the clerk issued said writs by his deputy, “ without taking from the petitioners, the defendants in execution, a bond, with two or more good and sufficient sureties, approved by said clerk, conditioned in the manner prescribed by law, but through negligence omitted to take from said petitioners, the defendants in said execution, such bond and security, upon the issuance of said writ of supersedeas, as by law and the condition of said writing obligatory he as clerk as aforesaid was bound to do.” It then proceeds to aver the loss of the debt as a consequence.
The defence was placed on various grounds, by eight special pleas, to six of which the plaintiff replied, and demurred to two, the third and the sixth. On argument of the demurrer, it was extended back by the court to the plaintiff’s declaration, which was adjudged insufficient, and judgment rendered for the defendants. The objection to the declaration, as it has been argued here, is, that it does not contain good cause of action, and so it was probably considered by the court below, without regard to defects of form.. The question then is narrowed down to this : Is the clerk of the circuit court liable on his bond, for issuing a writ or error and a supersedeas, without taking from the defendant in the judgment, bond conditioned according to law, with two or more sufficient sureties'?
Several grounds have been taken in the argument against the liability of the clerk, which deserve some consideration. First, it is said, that the granting of a writ of error is a judicial act, which by the common law, and formerly by a statute of this state, was performed by a judge, and that by changing the officer who was to do the thing, the legislature did not change the character of the thing to be done. That as a judicial officer would not be liable, neither is the clerk, who being substituted for the judge, cannot be under greater responsibility. This argument seems to admit, that if the clerk acted as a ministerial
It was also insisted that the erroneous conclusion of the clerk in regard to the sufficiency of the sureties is no breach of the bond. If this were even so, it is not an answer to the sufficiency of the declaration. The breach is, that the defendant did not take bond with two sufficient sureties. It may turn out that no bond was taken. At all events, we do not feel warranted by the state of the pleadings in deciding the breach to be ambiguous.
As to the objection that tho sheriff had made a sufficient levy which was not discharged by the supersedeas, that is not a proper inquiry in deciding on the sufficiency of the declaration.
The judgment must be reversed, and demurrer sustained to the pleas, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- A. McNutt, Governor, &c., use of David G. Moore and Robert Moore v. Samuel D. Livingston, William L. Balfour, James S. Ewing, and William Gartley
- Status
- Published