Graham v. Bradley
Graham v. Bradley
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
A bill single was executed by Edwin A. Reaves and Thomas Stewart, to Henry Bridges, in the following words:
“$300. On or before the 25th day of December next, we or either of us promise to pay to Henry Bridges, or order, three hundred dollars, for value received, as witness our hands and seals, this 29th of July, 1841. Edwin A. Reaves. [Seal.] Thos. Stuart. [Seal.]”
Upon this note are the following assignments: “I assign the within note to Thomas H. Bradley, and guaranty the same without notice or demand as tbe law requires. July 29, ’41. H. Beid&es.” “I assign the within note to R. &S. Graham,
The plaintiffs proved that they issued writs against Stuart and Reaves, the drawers of the bill single, the 4th of July, 1842, returnable to the July term, 1842. Said writ was returned executed on Stuart and not found as. to Reaves. A nolle prose-qui as to Reaves was entered, and at the November term of the court a judgment was obtained against Stuart, and an execution was issued during the term, upon a special order, and the sum of $61 00 was all the money the sheriff could make by virtue thereof.
On the 31st of December, 1842, Reaves paid $190 50, and of the sum of $61, made on the execution against Stuart, the plaintiffs received $49 11 cents. The note thus reduced was put in the hands of a constable in the spring of 1843, and on the 13th day of May, 1843, a judgment was obtained before a Justice of the Peace, against Reaves, for $80 77 cents, the balance due thereon, upon’which judgment an execution was issued, and was returned “no property found.”
If a judgment had been obtained against Stuart at the July term, 1842, of the court, the money could have been made out of his property. Reaves was also solvent in the fall of 1842, and continued solvent until January, 1843. The court charged the jury, “that the legal effect of the endorsement relied on by the plaintiffs was to impose on them a resort in the first instance to the makers of the note; that it was incumbent on the plaintiffs to show that they had instituted suit against the makers, returnable to the first term after the note fell due; that they prosecuted said suit to judgment, and that the writ of fieri facias issuing upon such judgment had been returned nulla bona, before they could be entitled to recover against the defendant.”
The jury found for the defendant. The plaintiffs moved for a new trial, which was overruled, and they appealed to this court.
It is insisted by the counsel for the plaintiff in error, with lintch earnestness and ingenuity of reasoning, that the guaranty
. 2nd. But it is said, if this be the correct construction of the guaranty, his honor the Circuit Judge erred in telling the jury “that it was incumbent upon the plaintiffs to show that they had instituted suit against the obligors, returnable to the first term after the note fell due.” The bond fell due 25th December, 3841: the first term of the court was in March, and suit was not instituted until the 4th of July, 1842.
But as we see that these facts were thus plainly shown by \ record of the suit, and could not have been found by the jury otherwise, and as another trial would necessarily result in a similar verdict, thejustice of the law having been attained, we do not think we ought to reverse the judgment merely because the Judge assumes the existence of these facts, which, strictly, he should have left to the jury to find, there being no error in the statement of the law.
Affirm the judgment.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.