Woodward v. Peabody
Woodward v. Peabody
Opinion of the Court
By the act of June 27, 1857, the time of holding the court of Common Pleas in Merrimack county was changed from the second to the third Tuesday of October. This act took effect on the 15th day of September, 1857, and, by virtue of it, the execution of the present plaintiff against the plaintiff in the original suit, issued on the 18th day of April, 1857, by its terms returnable on the second Tuesday of October, became and was, by operation of law, made returnable on the third Tuesday of October, and is so correctly set forth in the scire facias. Of this change in the return day of the execution the officer was bound to take notice. It therefore appeal's by the officer’s return that he returned the execution one week before it was by law returnable. Brown v. Roberts, 24 N. H. 131.
If it were necessary, therefore, to charge the defendant as endorser, that an execution for costs should issue against the original plaintiff, and be returned non est inventus, or in no part satisfied, by the officer to whom it had been committed for collection, it is clear, upon adjudged cases, that the demurrer in the present action must prevail; Chadbourne v. Hodgdon, 1 N. H. 359; Parsons v. Pearson, 1 N. H. 336; Ruggles v. Ives, 6 Mass. 495; Eaton v. Sloan, 2 N. H. 552; because it could not appear, by a return made one week before the return day of the execution, but what in that interval the officer might have found the judgment debtor, or satisfied the execution by a levy upon his property, or otherwise. Such return would furnish no evidence of avoidance or inability, between its date and the return day of the execution.
The question then arises, whether, under the provisions of the Revised Statutes in- relation to the endorsement of
The determination of this question depends upon the fact whether or not there is any substantial difference between those provisions and the law upon the same subject in force in this State for more than fifty years immediately preceding the adoption of the Revised Statutes ; for it was well settled, that under the former law, where a judgment was rendered for costs in favor of a defendant against a plaintiff not an inhabitant of this State, the endorser of such plaintiff’s original writ became immediately liable to pay such costs, and a scire facias might be at once maintained against him, without suing out any execution upon the judgment. Parsons v. Pearson, 1 N. H. 336; Chadbourne v. Hodgdon, 1 N. H. 359; Eaton v. Sloan, 2 N. H. 552; Butler v. Haynes, 3 N. H. 21; Shepley v. Story, 3 N. H. 63.
By the seventh section of the act of February 9, 1791, [Laws of 1805, — 88 ; Laws of 1815, — 100] it was provided, that all original writs issuing out of the Superior Court of Judicature, or the court of Common Pleas, shall, before they are served, be endorsed on the back thereof, near the bottom, by and with the name of the plaintiff, if he be an inhabitant of this State, or in like manner by his agent or attorney, being an inhabitant of this State; and where the plaintiff is not an inhabitant of this State, then the writ shall be endorsed in the manner aforesaid by some responsible person who is an inhabitant of this State ; and
In the revision of the statutes in 1828-9, the exact language of the foregoing section, omitting the words, 11 near the bottom,” in the description of the place of making the endorsement, and the words, 41 and to pay all prison charges that may happen,” in stating the extent of the liability, was reenacted as the tenth section of the act of January 2, 1829, and continued in force until superseded by the going into effect of the Revised Statutes on the first day of March, 1843.
On examining the Revised Statutes it will be seen that the provisions of this lengthy section, as amended in the revision of 1828-9, together with those of the fourth section of the act of December 31, 1828, regulating the endorsement of justice writs, are substantially embodied in three brief sections of chapter 182, as follows :
44 Sec. 17. All original writs shall, before they are served, be endorsed on the back thereof bj7 the plaintiff, his agent or attorney, being an inhabitant of this State; and if the plaintiff is not an inhabitant of this State, by some responsible person who is such inhabitant.
44 Sec. 18. The person so endorsing any writ shall be .liable, in case the plaintiff shall live out of the State, upon return of non est inventus, or that 'such execution as may
“ Sec. 19. Such defendant shall have his remedy by writ of scire facias against such endorser, which shall be served upon the endorser before the second term of the court, after final judgment is entered against the plaintiff, or within one year after final judgment is so rendered before a justice, and not afterwards.” Compiled Laws 465, 466.
Now it does not seem to us to admit of the slightest doubt that it must have been the intention of the commissioners who prepared, and of the legislature that enacted, the Revised Statutes, simply to embody, in a more brief and concise style, in these sections, the somewhat involved and more extended provisions of the existing laws on the subject of the endorsement of court and justice writs, the liability of the endoi-sers thereof, and the remedy to enforce that liability; and not to make any great or substantial change in those provisions, such as would result from the construction for which the defendant contends, and upon which the plaintiff seems to have acted in placing his execution against the original plaintiff* in the hands of an officer. Construing them as a mere reenactment in an abbreviated form of the old law, as it had been previously interpreted, the endorser of a writ is manifestly made liable, in three cases, for the costs recovered by the defendant; first, absolutely and immediately, where the plaintiff* is not an inhabitant of the State; secondly, where, although the plaintiff may be an inhabitant of the State, the execution issued against him shall have been duly returned by the officer to whom it was committed non est inventus as to him ; and, thirdly, when such execution against the original plaintiff, an inhabitant of the State, shall have been duly returned. unsatisfied, although the plaintiff may have been found by the officer.
Nor is there anything unnatural or forced in this construction, looking at the language employed. Any seeming difficulty entirely vanishes, by inserting or implying the conjunction “ or” between the two first clauses of the eighteenth section, setting forth the liability of the endorser, as it existed in the acts of 1791 and 1829. Besides, to regard the non-residence of the original plaintiff as a condition precedent to the possible liability of an endorser, would render utterly nugatory the endorsement of a writ by any other person than the plaintiff himself, whenever he was an inhabitant of the State. "With these views there must be judgment for the plaintiff on the demurrer.
Demurrer overruled.
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