Reynolds v. Executors of Rogers
Reynolds v. Executors of Rogers
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The first question presented by this record is this: Was the-evidence offered on the part of the plaintiffs below competent, and did it tend to establish the issue on their part? The evidence-offered were several records, duly authenticated, which unquestionably conduced to prove the allegations in the declaration. It may be said that under the issue of non est factum, the plaintiffs-below were not bound to give evidence of the proceedings upon the writ of error. If is true the plea only denies the execution of the bond; but the undertaking by the plaintiffs below to prove more-than was necessary for them did not inj ure the defendants below. If the proof was only supererogatory, they can not object. *Their right to complain attaches in no case, except the evidence admitted against them operated to their injury, and was objected to at the time of the trial. The bill of exceptions seems to be taken to the whole evidence, written and parol; and the counsel for the - plaintiffs in error has made no specification of the part he deems inadmissible. His objections are to the effect of the whole evidence given under the issue. It is admitted to be the duty of the-court to judge what written evidence proves. But the jury judge-
The next question to be considered is: Whether any evidence was admissible under the defendants’ notice? The law of Ohio, vol. xxii. 220, ch. 61, and p. 290, ch. 67, provides, “ that it shall be lawful for the defendant in any action to plead - the general issue, -and give any 'special matter in evidence, which, if pleaded, would be a bar to such action, giving notice with the same plea of the matter or matters so intended to be given in evidence.”. The -notice required by this act must be of matter which, if pleaded, would bar the action. The pleader, in framing a notice, should .ask himself: Does this matter constitute a legal bar? If so, how shall it be set forth to apprise my adversary of the real defense, and secure my client exemption from objections good on special -demurrer ? This form of pleading has not, in my opinion, improved the practice. It confers upon defendants nothing but security against the operation of a special demurrer, whose main office is to point out legal defects, and afford opportunity for their remedy by amendment. Whereas it exonerates a plaintiff from selecting one of the many matters he may wish to rely upon in his replication, and from exposing on the record the legal objections he intends to make, and leaves him at liberty, on the trial, to introduce proof of as many matters in opposition to the notice ■as he pleases, and to rely upon one or all of them; or the option ■ of suddenly springing upon his opponent objections to the notice, to the exclusion of all the ^testimony offered, and of the ■entire defense. The notice in the case below would, in our opinion, be bad on general demurrer. It does not attain that certainty required to inform the plaintiff below of the intended defense, and ■so no evidence whatever was receivable under it. This opinion is ■sustained by the uniform decisions of the Supreme Court on the circuit, and by decisions in other states under similar statutes. Lawrence v. Kneis, 10 Johns. 142; Shepard v. Merrel, 13 Johns. 476; Chamberlaine v. Goshen, 20 Johns. 145, 746; Tate v. Welling, 2 Term, 537.
But suppose the notice, as to the fact of the levy of an execution, upon the original judgment, on lands of one of the judgment
Five objections are urged to the declaration below: 1. The want • of an averment that an execution had been issued upon the original judgment, and returned no goods, ^before suit brought. 2. That the bond refers only to the judgment of revivor in 1827, and has no relation to the original judgment in favor of Rogers. 3. That the condition of the bond is not framed .according .to the law of the state. 4. That the bond, as set out,is without consideration and void. 5. The want of an averment that the plaintiffs in error obtained a writ of supersedeas to the judgment of 1823.
First. The general assembly has provided (29 Ohio L. 108; 22 Ohio L. 115) that before suit is brought against the security, upon appeal or injunction bond, execution shall be issued against the principal debtor and returned no goods or lands sufficient to satisfy the judgment. And where joint judgments are rendered upon written instruments, and it be proven to the court at the time of the judgment that one or more of the defendants are bail for a co-defendant, the elexxk shall certify which of the defendants are principals and which security, and shall issue execution, com.manding the officer to make the money, first of the principal, and
Second. Does the condition of the bond refer to. the original judgment? That was the only effective judgment in the cause. It was against that the defendants must have sought relief by the writ of error. The judgment of revivor had no other effect than to make the executors of Rogers parties to the judgment recovered by him in his lifetime, and to confer upon them power to enforce the execution of it. The judgment of revivor only gave life and force to the original judgment, which had become dormant by the death of the plaintiff. If the bond be held to extend to. that, judgment, the construction will carry it no farther than to embrace the only judgment there was in effect; that recovered by the testator and revived to his executors. How could *the judgment of revivor injure the defendants unless by imparting life to the dormant judgment? The plaintiffs in error and the court so understood it. The plaintiffs assigned errors on both the judgments, and prayed for the- reversal of both. Issue was taken on both, and judgment-rendered on both issues. Does it lie with the plaintiffs in error now, after having sued their writ under the bond upon both the judgments, and compelled their adversaries to meet and defend both until the judgment is had upon the proceeding, to say he did not give the bond, the incipient step in the whole proceeding in but one of the judgments, and to limit its application to the only one which could never have injured him in any possible way except by acting upon the other? We think not. But if the Supreme Court, in the judgment it gave, did fall into error, we have no authority to correct their errors, nor has the court power to allow writs of error to itself.
Third. The objection of the want of conformity in the bond with the statute is not a, new one. The statute, 22 Ohio L. 71; 29 Ohio D. 77, prescribes that the condition of the bond given on writ of error, shall be the payment of the condemnation money and costs, if the judgment be affirmed in whole or in part. The
Fourth. Can the plaintiff in error avail himself of the objection that the bond is without consideration ? It can not be necessary to waste time in reasoning to establish the position that at law a-party is not permitted to set up. the want of consideration in defense of a bond or sealed instrument. The objection has no foundation in law.
Fifth. This only remaining objection raises the question, whether it is material in a declaration on a writ of error bond to aver that the plaintiff in error had sued out a supersedeas to the judgment-below? The statutes, 22 Ohio L. 70, and 29 Ohio L. 77, contain-no provision requiring a writ of supersedeas to issue; though doubtless a writ might issue upon the application of the plaintiff in error. They do, however, contain a provision which authorizes-the universal practice of proceeding on the writ of error without a resort to a writ of supersedeas; “that the writ of error shall not operate as a supersedeas,” unless bond be filed. 29 Ohio L. 77. A party may prosecute his writ of error effectually without superseding the judgment he would reverse pending the proceeding, and rely upon the judgment of restitution on the writ of
The judgment is affirmed with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Thomas Reynolds and others v. Executors of C. Rogers
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- 1 case
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- Published