Henderson's Administrator v. King
Henderson's Administrator v. King
Opinion of the Court
Henderson sued King in the County Court of Franklin, and in his declaration complains that he recovered judgment in the County Court against J. Rogers for $186.66 and costs, in the year 1809, and took out a fieri facias, and delivered it to W. King, who was then sheriff of said county, by putting it into the hands of J. King, his deputy, to be executed and returned; that no return was made of the execution, whereby he has lost the benefit of, to his damage, &c. King, the defendant, pleaded not guilty, the statute of limitations, and that he was not sheriff of Franklin County. On these pleas issues were joined. The defendant also pleaded, “ that heretofore, in October sessions of the Court of Pleas, &c., in 1811, &c., the said plaintiff prosecuted by motion his suit against the defendant as sheriff aforesaid, and William Russell and C. Bullard, his sureties, for not returning the very same identical execution mentioned in the declaration, agreeably to an act of Assembly in such case made and provided, and such proceedings were thereupon had, that afterwards, at a Circuit Court began and held for said county on the second Monday in February, 1812,” the said motion came up by appeal to be tried and detei'mined before the said Circuit Court. And by the consideration and judgment of said court, the said defendant and his sureties were acquitted and finally discharged from further liability on said motion, and recovered judgment against the said plaintiff for costs, as by the record and proceedings thereof still remaining in said court, more fully and at large appears, and this he is ready to verify, &c. To this plea the plaintiff demurred, and after a verdict against him on the issues, appealed to the Circuit Court; and on his death, the suit was revived in the name of the administrators. * The plaintiff had a verdict on the issues for $248. The court overruled the demurrer to the fourth plea, and gave judgment for the defendants. The cause was removed to this court by writ of error, and it is now assigned for error, that the Circuit Court erred in overruling the demurrer. First, because the plea does not show that when the motion was made in the County Court or Circuit Court, the defendant made
Much argument hath taken place at the bar upon the questions made in this cause; one position, however, may be assumed safely, that the plea to exempt the defendant ought not to leave any part of the defensive allegation so uncertain, as that if the court supposes the existence of a fact, that fact may not exist. The plea here states a former motion against the defendant and his sureties, and a final discharge from that motion. If the discharge was because the court found that the execution was not delivered to him, or was returned by him, or that he had paid the money, a discharge for any of these causes ought to be a discharge against any future action to be determined upon the same points, or any of them. If the discharge was for want of notice, or for any other cause not involving the merits of the complaint, these ought not to be an exemption from this action. The court ought not to proceed upon the conjecture that the decision was founded upon some of these final points, when it might be that the conjecture is unfounded ; and when it may be that in reality the judgment of the Circuit Court went on other and different grounds, the merits being not affected. There ought to be a certainty upon this head. If it be unattainable from the record, considering the usual forms adopted by the clerks in recording these motions and the proceedings upon them, the defect may be remedied by averment, * in like manner as it may be supplied by averment whether a recovery in trover or trespass was for the property in a slave or horse, or only for the abuse thereof. 2 Haywood’s Reports. And the averment ought to be made in the plea, to ascertain the very point or points on which the court acted in discharging the defendant. Were we to be satisfied by the phraseology of the record of discharge, the dismission of the defendant was not general, but limited to the motion. But it would be unsafe to rest upon this circumstance, as thereby a mistake or inaccuracy of the clerk might determine the cause the one way or the other. This averment ought to be made in the plea. Why depend upon the replication to state that for the completion of the plea which it is not for the interest of the plaintiff to state ? Why compel him to reply at all rather than rely upon the statements of his adversary ? And if he rely and rest upon them, what becomes of the certainty which the court must have in forming a decision ?
,N. B. The- plea ought to be supported by affidavit as to the truth of the fact stated therein.
See King’s Digest, 550, 10,900.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Henderson's Administrator v. William King
- Status
- Published