State v. Leeds
State v. Leeds
Opinion of the Court
This is a suit on a sheriff’s, bond. The declaration contains two breaches, t.he first being a general negation of the condition of the obligation, and the second an allegation of a specific breach of duty in permitting a voluntary escape of a defendant in execution. To this declaration a general demurrer has been put in.
The question intended to be raised on these pleadings is. stated in the following words in the brief of the counsel of the defendants, viz., “Can a suit be instituted on a sheriff’s official bond in the name of the state for an escape suffered by the sheriff, until the sheriff’s liability for an escape is fixed by suit and judgment?”
On abstract theory there would seem to be no room for the doubt suggested in this inquiry. The allegation in the-pleading is, that the sheriff voluntarily permitted a party, defendant, whom he had taken in execution, to escape. As this.
This being the case it would be manifestly oppressive to require the plaintiff to prove, in a suit against the officer alone, his breach of puty, and then to retry the same question in the suit against the same officer and his sureties. This would be a greater injustice to the plaintiff than any which,, in the brief of counsel, is suggested as likely to befall the defendants from their supposed liability to plead, with the necessary amplitude, to the suit on the bond.
But it may well be doubted whether the counsel of the defendants is right, with regard to the rules of pleading applicable to this case. He has regarded this as an action founded on an instrument under seal; and, in his view, the
ant may plead nil debet. Warren v. Consett, Ld. Raym,. 1500; Bullis v. Giddens, 8 Johns. 83; 1 Saund. 202-211— 276, notes 1, 2. For the same reason this plea is sufficient in debt on a devastavit against an executor, the judgment in that action being simply inducement, and the devastavit the foundation of the action. The rule and the principle on which it rests are similar in the action of debt founded on the escape. 1 Chit. Pl. 517, 7th Am. ed. In Minton v. Woodworth & Ferris, 11 Johns. 474, an action of debt was brougnt for an escape on a bond for the gaol liberties. Among the pleas put in Avas one of nil debet, which was demurred to, but the court vindicated the propriety of its use, for the reason that the deed Avas only inducement to the action. This same mode of pleading is recognized in Gates v. Wheeler, 2 Hill 233.
But be this doctrine as it may, and as this subject is not discussed in the briefs of counsel, no definitive opinion is intended to be expressed with regard to it, I am at a loss to see on what principle this demurrer is to be sustained.
In my investigation of this subject I have not met a case which, in all its parts, is identical with that now before the court; but I can see no reasonable ground for putting the instance of an escape on any other footing, so far as concerns the form of pleading, than other lapses from official duty. It is certainly perfectly clear on the adjudged cases, that legal formality does not prohibit an immediate resort to the bond iu redress for damages sustained by most official defaults. Thus in The State v. Roberts and others, 7 Halst. 114, the action was on a sheriff’s bond and the breach assigned was a neglect to levy a ft. fa. on the goods of the defendant in execution. The damages in the case were wholly unliquidated, and yet there was no allegation that there had been a previous recovery against the sheriff. The following authorities will also be found to maintain the usual, and what is believed to be the correct doctrine, that suits on bonds, of the general character of the one now under consideration, need not be based on a precedent recovery against the delinquent official. Governor v. White, 4 Slew. & Por. 441 ; Governor v. Roberts, 2 Bibb 395; Treasurer v. Wiggins, 1 McCord 568; Ohio v. Myers, 14 Ohio 538.
Nor is there, as the counsel of the defendants appears to imagine, anything in the act relating to sheriffs and which prescribes the mode of prosecution on their official bonds, which is indicative of an intention to limit the right to put such bonds in suit, to any particular class of cases. The lan
Judgment should be entered in favor of the plaintiff on the demurrer, with leave, &c.
Elmer and Van Dyke, Justices, concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State v. SAMUEL T. LEEDS
- Status
- Published