State v. Powers
State v. Powers
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action on the bond of Moore, sheriff of Lincoln county, against the sureties on it. The plea is nil debet. On trial plaintiff dismissed his action as to all but two of the defendants. The bond, when offered in evidence, was objected to and excluded, and judgment declared for defendants by the judge, who tried the case without a jury, by consent of parties. Afterwards, and before the judgment was entered on the minutes, plaintiff moved to set aside the judgment, with a view to dismiss as to one of the defendants, and to amend the declaration, but this was refused. The exclusion of the bond as evidence, and the refusal, after judgment declared, to set it aside for the purpose stated, are assigned for error, having been excepted to at the time.
The record does not disclose the ground on which'the bond was excluded as evidence, but it is obvious from an inspection
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The State of Mississippi, use, etc. v. R. C. Powers
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. OificiAL Bonds : Joint and several. When surety may be sued separately. Where several sureties signed an official bond, and each surety bound himself “ severally for the sum, and the sum alone, set respectively opposite their names,” a joint action cannot be maintained against them for the amount of the bond. Their obligation is several, and not joint and several. Such a bond is not good as a statutory bond, for want of conformity to the statute, but is good as a common law obligation, and a separate action may be maintained against each of the sureties for the sum set opposite his name, treating it as the bond of each surety in a penalty equal to the amount set opposite . his name. 2. Same : Judgment by the court when the parties waive a jury. When the parties waive a jury and submit the case to the court for trial, and the court renders a judgment on the whole case, as submitted, in favor of the defendants, it is too late to move the court to set aside the judgment, with a view to dismiss^ as to some of the defendants. The finding of the judge is likened in this respect to the verdict of a jury.