City of Providence v. Goldenberg
City of Providence v. Goldenberg
Opinion of the Court
These two cases are actions of debt on bond, brought in the name of the City of Providence, for the benefit respectively of said Mayo and Maguire. The in *328 strument upon which each of these actions is brought is termed a "Motor Bus License Bond” and contains all the formal requisites of a bond with the exception that no seal is attached to said instrument.
It appears that one Jacob Goldenberg desired to obtain from the Board of Police Commissioners of said city a license to operate a motor bus' within said city for the purpose of transporting passengers for hire; that the instrument in question was executed by said Jacob Goldenberg as principal and by the defendant as surety and that by the terms of said instrument both principal and surety are bound to said city in the penal sum of $2,000. The obligation clause in said instrument recites that said Board of Police Commissioners has pursuant to the provisions-of the Public Laws of the State and the ordinances of said city granted to said principal a motor bus license and that said principal and surety have jointly and severally agreed to pay all damages sustained by any person and caused by any neglig¿nt or unlawful act on the part of said principal or his agents in the conduct of the principal’s business as a motor bus operator! Said clause further provides that nothing contained in said instrument shall be construed as imposing any liability inconsistent with the law relative to contributory negligence.
The declaration in each case alleges that said Jacob Goldenberg as principal and the defendant Samuel Golden-berg as surety by their written obligation sealed with their seals jointly and severally promised to pay to said city the ‘ ‘ sum of $2,000 upon the terms and conditions set forth in said bond.” The declaration in each case alleges as a breach of the condition of said "bond” that the motor bus of said principal, while employed in the business for which said license was granted, was negligently driven against, the person for whose benefit the suit was brought to the injury of said person while he was in the exercise of due care.
The cases were tried together before a justice of -the Superior Court sitting with a jury. The jury apparently found in each case that the negligence of said principal was *329 the proximate cause of the injury and that the person for whose benefit the first suit was brought was damaged to the ■extent of $125, and that the person for whose benefit the second suit was brought was damaged to the extent of $600. The verdict in the first case was as follows: “The jury find that the Defendant did promise and does owe in manner and form as the Plaintiff has in his declaration thereof complained against him and assess damages for the Plaintiff in the penal sum of $2,000 and the jury chancerize said bond in the sum of $125.” The verdict in the second case was the same with the exception that the final figures were $600 instead of $125.
The transcript contains the following memorandum: ■“ (Court received verdict of the jury on chancerization of the bond, and at the same time directed a verdict for the penal sum of the bond. Defendant’s counsel thereupon objects and refuses to give his consent to such a verdict being received. Defendant’s exception overruled and exception noted.) ”
Each case is before us on the defendant’s said exception and also on his exception to the refusal of the trial court to direct a verdict for the defendant.
In Bowen v. White, 26 R. I. page 71, this court said: “The jury should have found affirmatively or negatively upon the issues, which, like all issues in the action of covenant, were special. Then, after judgment for the penal sum of the bond, the court or another jury should have assessed the damages, according to equity and good conscience.” See also Blaisdell v. Harvey, 25 R. I. 572; Tilley v. Cottrell, 21 R. I. page 310.
It was argued that there would be a saving of time and effort by having the amount for which am execution should be awarded determined at the time of the decision or verdict for the penal sum. It is a sufficient answer to say that the legislature has prescribed a different procedure. The defendant’s exception to the action of the court in permitting the jury, which found that there had been a breach óf the instrument termed a bond, to also determine at the same time the amount for which an execution should be awarded is sustained.
*331 It. was stated at the hearing that a practice prevailed in the Superior Court of submitting to the same jury, by agreement of parties, the question of liability on the bond and the question as to the amount for which an execution should be awarded. Parties, of course, may, with the consent of court, agree that, in the event of a verdict for the penal sum, judgment may be entered forthwith for the penal sum and also agree that the jury may proceed to fix the amount for which an execution should be awarded. If judgment is entered for the penal sum it would seem that the defendant would be precluded from thereafter questioning the correctness of the verdict for the penal sum; but if the parties with the consent of court agree to waive their rights to have reviewed the findings of the jury on the question of liability on the bond we think they may properly do so and have both questions at the same time submitted to the jury.
The defendant’s other exception is to the refusal of the court to direct a verdict for the defendant. The defendant contends that in as much as the instrument (in the form of a bond) upon which liability was based did not bear a seal said instrument was not a bond and that the actions should have been brought in assumpsit instead of in debt on bond.
9 Corpus Juris, at page 14, states the rule as follows: "As a general rule, in the absence of statute providing otherwise, a seal is of the essence of a bond, and no writing can have the qualities which attach to a bond without the seal of the party executing it, and in the absence of a seal an *332 instrument will not be construed as a sealed bond, although there is a recital in the body thereof that the obligors and parties have set their hands and seals thereto.”
As the instrument upon which these suits were based is not a bond and as the suits were actions of debt on bond we think that the trial justice should have granted the defendant’s motion to direct a verdict in his favor and that the failure to do so was error.
At the time of argument the plaintiff filed a motion that this court permit the declaration to be amended by adding a count in assumpsit. In view of the conclusions which we have already reached we think that the motion must be denied. The motion is denied without prejudice as to any rights which the plaintiff may have to commence any action other than debt.
■The plaintiff, if it shall see fit, may appear before this court on the next motion day at ten o’clock a. m., and show cause, if any it has, why an order should not be entered remitting each case to the Superior Court with direction to enter judgment for the defendant.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- City of Providence for Benefit of Adelard Mayo vs. Samuel Goldenberg; Same for Benefit of Thomas Maguire, P. A. vs. Samuel Goldenberg
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published