Jones v. Griffin
Jones v. Griffin
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
By the common law, if the condition of the bond was not performed ad diem, the penalty was forfeited, and the obligor had no remedy but in Equity. To remove the necessity of going into the Court of Equity, the Stat. 4 Ann. C. 16, sec. 12, provides, “that if the obligor shall before action brought, have paid to the obligee the principal and interest due by the defea-sance or condition of such bond, though such payment was not strictly according to the condition or defeasance, yet it shall and may nevertheless be pleaded in bar of such action, and
In most, if not all these cases, any matter of defence which arises after action brought, will avail the defendant when properly pleaded, as effectually as if it existed when the suit was commenced; but as the plaintiff had a good cause of action, when he commenced it, which has been defeated by something occurring afterwards, the defendant must pay all the costs which accrued up to that time. This has been done in this case, and it seems to me the plea of payment, puis darrvn continuance> is an effectual bar to the plaintiffs action, unless we adopt the senseless rule of adhering strictly to the letter of a remedial Act, in utter disregard to its spirit, end and design. It was supposed in the argument, that if the plea be allowed, the plaintiff cannot sue again on the bond, when there is another default by the non-payment of the instalments hereafter to become due. I do not perceive that any such consequence will follow. The 12th sec. provides only that the payment shall be in bar of the
The motion is dismissed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.