Inhabitants v. M'Cormick
Inhabitants v. M'Cormick
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of debt upon a bond conditioned for the faithful performance of the office of constable.
It is brought in the name of the Inhabitants of the township of Middletown in the county of Monmouth, being their name of incorporation, against Dennis McCormick, the constable, and Timothy Murphy, Esq. one of his sureties, who have survived Charles Dubois the other surety and obligor.
Upon oyer prayed, the bond appears to he expressed in these words, viz “Know all men by those presents, that “we, Dennis McCormick, Timothy Murphy and Charles “ Dubois in the county of Monmouth, and state New Jersey, “ are held and firmly bound unto the Inhabitants of the iowntlship of Middletown aforesaid, in their corporate capacity, “in the sum of one thousand dollars, each, to be paid,” &c. omitting in the corporate name the words in the county of Monmouth ; and it is conditioned for the doing and executing all services, acts'and duties appertaining to the said [*] office, &c. which is broader than the words of the act under which it is supposed to have been taken.
To this declaration after oyer, &c. as aforesaid, it is demurred ; and upon the argument the counsel rests his demurrer on these three points, viz.
1st. The bond is void because it is not given to the corporation in its corporate name.
2d. The bond is void because the condition is broader than the act requires, to wit, the 52d section of the act constituting courts for the trial of small causes, on which it is said to be founded.
3d. Because the bond is several, and the action is joint against the surviving obligors.
The two first of these points have been fully considered, and I had thought settled, in the case of Wool wick v. Forrest &C. (Ante. 115) Butthe learned counsel who argued that case for the plaintiff, being now concerned on the other side, seems to have caught a new ray of light upon the subject. For my own part, not having changed the medium through which I then viewed it, it appears to me in this case just as it did in that. In the argument some notice has been taken of what was said from the bench in the Woolwich case. Much time has been spent to shew the office of averments, and that no averment can make that good which is originally vicious. This is certainly true. Nor is the contrary, in the slightest degree intimated, much less maintained in the case referred to, according to my understanding of that case.
It is there laid down that there is, as to the necessity of the corporate name, a distinction between writs, and grants,
Now all that is said about averments, in that case, is that when a corporation appears in court in its proper corporate name, and declares upon a bond in which there is a variance from that name, it must be averred in some form or other that the corporation suing and the corporation named in the bond is one and the same corporation; and that for the sake of consistency in the record, but by no means to make a bond good which is in itself vicious. It certainly never could have entered into the mind of any man, that a bond in itself void from its very creation, could be made good by averment.
Having said this much by way of correcting what I suppose to have been a mistake as to what was said in the Woolwich case, I have only to add, that upon the substance of the thing, I am perfecly satisfied with the decision thero rendered as to the two first points here insisted upon, to wit, that they are not sufficient to maintain the demurrer.
But the third, to wit, that the bond is several and not joint, appears to me to be conclusive against the plaintiff.— I can give the words no construction which will make it a joint bond. And it is immaterial whether such construction would be more or less for the benefit of the defendants. We can render judgment only according to the obligation.
The principal objection to this action is, that it is founded on a bond containing a condition not warranted by law. The bond was taken by the inhabitants of the township, of a constable. As there is no other act authorizing townships to take bonds of constables respecting the execution of the duty arising out of their office, but that provided by the S 2d section of the act constituting courts for the trial of small causes, it is I think a legal presumption that this bond was taken under that act. The direction of this act has not been followed either in form or substance, for which [*] reason I think the bond invalid, and that no action can be maintained on it. On a review of this subject, and the best consideration I have been able to give it, I very much question the authority of townships to take bonds of constables to enforce the preform anee of legal duties, except in the case specially provided for by statute. Here is
As to the objection arising from leaving out of the bond the name of the county, in the corporate name of the township, I have on a former occasion
Judgment for Defendants.
State Reports, 119.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.